Monday, December 31, 2012

A New Year: 2013!



by Anita Sullivan

Over the past month, we’ve sung carols, lit candles, shopped, opened presents, cooked elaborate meals, talked or visited with family we rarely do, decked the halls, filled the stockings, and celebrated the season. But now that it’s time to clean the mess, pay the bills, head back to school and work, and start the New Year, what do we focus on now?

For so many people, Christmas is truly a magical time. Yet we can easily forget that in homes across our land, the magic can’t outweigh the reality that families face. In that home with abuse? It didn’t end, and may have even been worse with the added pressures. In that home with not enough money to keep things going? December didn’t change that, and guilt was felt for not providing as much as they hoped. In that home where illness casts a shadow? It still did, as families spent their Christmas in the hospital praying the New Year would bring new health. In the home where loss was felt this year? Grief still lived, sometimes with added hurt over missing their loved one through the holidays.

As I step back and look at the Christmas season from a different angle, I see that the magic truly comes from people who share God’s love, not from any tinsel or gift. There are those who buy extra presents- and gift them to children in shelter. There are those who hang lights- not just on their own trees, but on displays for the community to enjoy. There are those who sing songs- not just with their families, but for the community after many many hours of practice. There are those who serve food- not just in their home, but for masses of people who have none. There are those who give money- and not just for last minute tax breaks, but of love.

The magic of Christmas is in how much is given with nothing asked in return. The danger is that the season ends, and the needs don’t. The families still hurt, the needs still exist, and yet the giving isn't at the same pace.

As we begin 2013, consider how you gave this Christmas season, how you showed love to those who need it. Don’t let it stop because the season is over. Let this be the year of Christmas all year long.

 Anita Sullivan is the sister of a missing person, and long time advocate of victims, even before having a personal connection to the world of lost. During college,Anita found a passion for helping others and was involved in a variety of ministries. She then started a career in non-profit, first working with victims of domestic violence and sexual assault. She went on to work with at risk families through a supervised visitation program before spending several years in fundraising and advocacy. She now tries to reach people with a message of Hope through writing and speaking, while honoring her brother, Michael "Austin" Davis, who has been missing since 2007. To learn more about Anita, visit her at losingaustin.blogspot.com.

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Gun Control Is Not The Answer


by Heidi Hiatt

In 1780 a Kentuckian named Samuel was serving in the Continental Army under General George Rogers Clark. He had twelve children.

On June 24th of that year, at a small settlement called Ruddle’s Station, the British and their Native American allies attacked at dawn. Twenty people were killed, including Samuel’s wife Hannah, who was scalped.

Samuel and his 12 year-old son were captured and held at Fort Detroit for the next four and a half years.

It is their sacrifices and their willingness to take up arms against a corrupt government that brought a nation founded on liberty and justice for all into being.

Almost a century later, a nation divided in two and men fought their fellow Americans in a bloodbath that went on for half a decade. Samuel and Hannah’s great-grandson took up arms and risked his life for what he believed was right. He too spent years as a prisoner of war.

Over fifty years later Samuel’s great-great-grandsons would defend their country against tyranny and oppression in the first World War. About twenty-five years after that, their sons would rise up against powerful evils bent on genocide and world domination. A quarter century later, Samuel and Hannah’s great-great-great-great-grandson would serve his country during the Vietnam War.

Nearly thirty years after Vietnam, and almost 225 years after Samuel and Hannah’s sacrifices, their great-great-great-great-great-granddaughter found herself fighting her own war, a man with his hands around her throat a second after he uttered the words, “That’s it. I’m going to f___ing kill you.”

In a sickening turn of events that tied her to the very residence she’d just escaped from, the granddaughter found herself living in the same house she’d just fled for the next five months until she was allowed to sell it.

During the day she went to work at a police department where she assisted the public, including crime victims. At night she returned home to a sealed off house regardless of the temperature, sleeping in various places with two phones and two guns next to her at all times. Given the nature of the repeated threats she’d received and the skill set of the person threatening her, she could not hesitate to take his life if he came for hers.

Upon his arrest the police had confiscated his firearms, including a custom-built rifle that she’d been asked to help pick out parts for. This was the one that he said he’d kill her with when she was sitting in her car at lunch. During the course of the investigation, while a protection order was in place, he “sold” his firearms out of safekeeping at the police department to his next door neighbor and lifelong family friend.

Despite her pleas to park in the police department’s garage, she still had to park on the street and walk across a large open lawn to the building. A supervisor even suggested that she park a quarter mile away down a dark, wooded trail that she would be alone on. She was told to just trust that the police (her coworkers) would rescue her if the need arose. While she didn’t doubt that some of them would risk their lives for her, realistically, they wouldn’t be able to respond quickly enough if she had the chance to call them at all.

Should this woman have the right to defend herself? Some people say that only the police and military should possess firearms. The man who threatened her life is a police officer. Should she still? Given that criminals, the vengeful, and the mentally ill will always find a way to obtain firearms regardless of what our laws say, should she, a law-abiding citizen, be denied a means to fight back in self-defense?

I am Samuel and Hannah’s granddaughter.

In my lifetime I have experienced family violence both as a child and an adult. I’ve seen family members beaten and had childhood playmates murdered. I’ve had friends and relatives raped and mugged. I’ve had people escape violently abusive relationships and barely get out with their lives.

Nine months after I left an abusive marriage, a pregnant family friend was killed by her husband in front of their small children. Last week I was on the phone and email contacting friends and relatives who live near or visit the Clackamas Town Center in Oregon after a shooting rampage occurred there. Some had been in the mall the day before. A family friend was there the day of the shooting and reluctantly left the mall an hour before the murders because her mother had locked herself out of the house.

I spent more than eight years in police records which allowed me to review many case reports involving crime. I have a B.A. in criminal justice and M.A. in forensic psychology, meaning that I’ve conducted in-depth studies of violent crime in addition to years of informal study of the subject. One universal characteristic that all of these perpetrators I’ve experienced and studied have is—and please hear me—that they don’t give a damn about the law. They give a damn about themselves and their twisted ideas of how others should be treated.

In the wake of the Newtown, Connecticut massacre, a cry has gone up around the country calling for more gun control laws (or banning firearms altogether). After one of the worst tragedies of our time, as we are still processing the grief, the disbelief, and the horror, this might seem like the sensible and compassionate thing to do. Many well-meaning people have joined in believing that if we can outlaw some or all types of guns, hell on earth situations like this will be minimized or prevented.

While listening to a news reporter make the decisive statement tonight that, “only the police and the military should have guns,” I felt 232 years of my family’s history rush into my thought processes. Both the Democrats and Republicans in my circles own guns; only in recent years has anyone regarded this as extreme when we simply want to protect our people, our property, and God forbid, our country. This is how it’s been since the beginning and to strip a nation of its firearms is to deprive millions of what is sometimes the most effective means of preserving life and deterring crime.

If we outlaw firearms, then it is primarily the law-abiding responsible citizens who the guns are taken from. Criminals will always do what they can to get what they want and that applies to firearms as much as anything else. Banning guns would also make the general populace terrifically vulnerable to a corrupt government and terrorists. Gandhi knew this—he said it about the British. If you want to control a people, take away their firearms. In America we would be taking away the tools that made us able to break away from a corrupt government in the first place.

A prevalence of gun laws does not equal an absence of gun violence. 

Some analysts are quick to point out how certain countries that do not allow private ownership of firearms have little gun violence. There are other countries, however, that have disproportionate amounts of gun violence when there are laws to protect against it. In our own country we can look at cities and counties where guns are frowned upon yet gang shootings persist or guns are routinely utilized by criminals.

Additionally, crime victims and survivors should not be deprived of the right to defend themselves. I am deeply troubled by the violence I have seen in my life and how little we do to prepare women especially for the threats that exist in this world. An appalling number of women are victims of domestic and sexual violence, but we let them grow up without knowing how to fight back. Every woman should know how to defend herself, and if she chooses to obtain a concealed pistol license or carry another tool for preventing her rape or murder, that is her business. That is her right.

When I take an inventory of how many women I know who have been affected by violence, I think of how different their lives might be if they had known early on how to spot a criminal personality and how to best defend themselves against him. This also applies to some of my male friends and relatives who’ve also been through the hell of victimization and its agonizing aftermath. I think of friends in law enforcement who’ve been threatened and assaulted by criminals outside of work and had to defend themselves and the public by shooting someone at work.

A well-placed bullet could have ended any one of these spree killers’ massacres before they began. While it is usually not advisable to shoot in a crowd situation, I have to consider that the best defense against a depressed, antisocial killer with a firearm is a responsible person with another firearm. An aspect of the Clackamas Town Center shooting from last week that I haven’t seen except on an Oregon news website is that 22 year-old Nick Meli, who has a concealed carry permit, did draw his weapon within sight of the shooter. He couldn’t take a shot because he might have hit someone close by, but the shooter, who seemed to be struggling with a jammed firearm, killed himself soon after.

Did the presence of another firearm have a deterrent effect? We might never know for sure. If it had been safe to take the shot, could lives have been saved? They could have been. What is the government’s response to such incidents? To send in trained shooters—because that’s the level of force necessary when dealing with an active shooter situation. Am I saying that we private citizens should be drawing down on threats right and left? No I am not, and I resent any generalizations, word-twisting, or comments about extremism in advance. I do believe, however, that a well-armed, well-trained populace is the best defense against the rising threats to our safety and our country.

My ancestors held to their guns and enshrined the right to keep and bear arms in the Constitution for a reason. You can train yourself to respond to crises psychologically, you can become proficient with other weapons, and you can learn how to fight, but there are threats that can only be answered with firearms. I respect everyone’s right to choose how to best defend themselves and understand when people don’t want anything to do with guns. What I don’t understand is the call to rid all legal gun owners of one of the most effective means we have against violence and terror.

If my daughter were being attacked, I hope to heaven that a CPL holder nearby would put the would-be rapist at gunpoint and keep her from that most vile of violations. If my house were burglarized, I would not wait to find out if the intruders simply wanted to sit down with a cup of tea with my family and I before arming myself. If there were a spree shooting or act of terrorism going on and it was possible to safely neutralize the perpetrator before lives were lost, I don’t believe we should just sit there, we should save lives.

After what I’ve seen my people go through, including the lives lost, and the more I learn about my own history, the more I believe that we Americans should never, ever give up our right to keep and bear arms. It is the selfish and evil choices of the criminal and mentally ill that bring an end to innocent lives, not the firearms themselves or the vast majority of the people who own them. Telling tens of millions of gun owners in this country that they are extremists who endanger others is ludicrous. Barring them from owning firearms is about control, not safety—taking guns from the citizenry simply lets the government have all the control and puts us in even a worse position than we were before the American Revolution.

Do not tell me, after the threats I have faced and the sacrifices I have made, that I do not have the right to defend myself via firearms. Do not tell me that it should be illegal for me to prevent myself from being sexually assaulted or murdered. Do not tell me that my friends and family should not have a tried and true way of defending themselves and their property from the creeps, addicts, and predators who would take their innocence and their lives without batting an eyelash. Do not tell me that what my ancestors fought and died for is now irrelevant and we should hand over our guns to Uncle Sam so we can be kept “safe.”

Gun control will not make us safer. It will ultimately make the lives of the criminal, corrupt, and crazy a lot easier. In an age in which dark and desperate forces are rising up across the globe to destroy our way of life and our children are more vulnerable to violence than ever before, this is one American, who due to education, experience, and heritage, strongly opposes the efforts to relieve law-abiding people of their firearms.

We’re the ones who should have them.

The best we can hope for concerning the people at large is that they be properly armed. -Alexander Hamilton


 
Heidi Hiatt, MA is as a Forensic Psychologist.  You can read more of her posts at her personal blog, Truth, Justice, and All-American Allergen-Free Apple Pie Straight Talk in a Crooked World

Monday, December 17, 2012

Tarnished Badges in Las Vegas





by Dennis Griffin

The law-enforcement agencies tasked with ridding Las Vegas of the corruption of organized crime in the 1970s and into the ‘80s had to clean up their own houses before taking on the mobsters. The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department had been rocked by a scandal involving detectives providing information to the bad guys. And the FBI had image problems of its own.

Starting in the late 1960s, the word within federal law enforcement circles was that agents working out of the FBI’s Las Vegas office were “freeloading” all over town. They were reportedly receiving free meals and drinks from the very individuals and casinos they were supposed to be investigating or keeping an eye on.

Richard Crane, head of the federal organized-crime strike force in Southern California and Nevada from 1970 to 1975, knew that this conduct, if true, had to be confronted and rectified. Crane complained to Justice Department officials in Washington and an inspection team was sent to Las Vegas to find out what was going on. After a couple of weeks the inspectors left, having supposedly chastised the offending agents. Crane was satisfied — until he began receiving word that the inspection team itself had taken advantage of the available comps! He heard reports that the investigators had enjoyed their stay and left without accomplishing anything; meanwhile, the agents assigned locally were continuing to take advantage of casino largesse. An Internal Revenue Service agent Crane trusted confirmed the allegations. Crane again complained to Washington, but when he left government service in 1975, the problems in Las Vegas continued unchecked.

Jack Keith, agent in charge of the Vegas office from 1974 until 1977, discussed the situation with a Los Angeles Times reporter after his retirement. “The precedent was set by one of the first agents in charge in Las Vegas. When he ate at a casino, he never even signed the check. He just got up and left.”

Keith offered an explanation of why things got out of hand. “The town was a cesspool. The atmosphere permeated everything. The old-timers were part of it and didn’t even know it. No man should have been allowed to stay in that town for more than three years. Some of the agents had been there for ten or fifteen years. I told them there was no such thing as a free lunch and that some day they’d have to pay for it.”

But allegations of taking a few meals or seeing some free shows weren’t the end of it, things got worse. When the Dunes and later the Aladdin were wiretapped, the men being taped were content to discuss golf, the weather, and women. Some of the agents working the taps believed that the lack of productivity was due to leaks originating from other agents. Similar to the situation the police found themselves in, other FBI field offices became reluctant to share information with their Vegas colleagues.

Another complaint to Washington resulted in yet another inspection team being sent to Sin City in June 1977. This time the investigators weren’t compromised. Within a few months, a dozen local agents were censured, reassigned, or opted for early retirement. This housecleaning set the stage for the investigative successes that would eventually bring down the Mob in Sin City.



Dennis Griffin is a True Crime Author, Co-Host of Crime Wire and We Know a Guy on the Inside Lenz Network.  He has written several books concentrating on the history of the mob presence in Las Vegas. www.dennisngriffin.com
  

Friday, December 14, 2012

Victim Impact Statements: Isn’t it Time for a Little Creativity and Personalization?



by Donna R. Gore, M.A.

Typical Sample [Compliments of crimevictimservicecenter.org – Kennewick, WA]

The crime committed against me by John Doe has hurt me in so many ways that I don’t know where to begin.

My friends and co-workers have mentioned to me that my demeanor and behavior has changed at work and during social activities. I am currently experiencing flashbacks of the event and suffer from nightmares and lack of sleep. I constantly replay the day of the crime over and over in my head. I had to describe the day of the crime to the detective, then to the prosecuting attorney, then to the defense attorney, and to an investigator. Having to repeat the events of the incident over and over again was stressful and tried my patience. It became harder and harder to answer their questions or even tell my story again. I had to miss work, show up to work late, and leave work early due to the stress I was experiencing. I am in counseling because I am stressed, anxious, hypersensitive, and have suicidal thoughts. I wish this had never happened and I want it over as soon as possible, but I know my paranoia will never go away.

This crime has hurt my family too. My mother also suffers from insomnia and anxiety due to the crime. We live in a small town and everyone has heard about the crime. My father almost lost his job because he has had to attend court with me. I can’t escape the questions from friends of the family. Naturally, everyone is concerned for my family and me, but not being able to escape the incident kills me. It is just another constant reminder that John Doe committed a crime against my family and me.

I have friends telling me that they ran into John Doe and that she/he says they’re sorry. I wish she/he would stop communicating to me through our mutual friends. When I hear that people have run into her/him my heart races, I have shortness of breath, and start to feel dizzy.

I’m constantly asking God why? Why me, why my family? What did I do to deserve this?

I’m worried what John Doe might do after she/he gets out. I want her/him to get help because this isn’t the first time this crime has been committed and that she/he’d been sorry. I don’t want John Doe to hurt me or anyone else. I want to be protected from John Doe forever.


...end...

In 1987, Ladyjustice’s victim impact statement would not have won the Pulitzer Prize for journalism….But, it was from the heart. Looking back now, I could have crafted something different…if the emotions hadn’t gotten in the way. And that is the point. Having emotions interjected into the narrative and/or verbal presentation is a double-edged sword… On the one hand, the judge, the attorneys, the defendant and the families need to hear the emotion to understand and to validate the tremendously negative changes in their quality of life and the realities of the situation in terms of the human toll.

On the other hand, emotion can overtake the speaker, especially when in very close proximity to the defendant. As a survivor, you want your day in court. It’s your special time to relate just how devastating the entire experience has been.

Currently in Connecticut, Victim Services open approximately 13,000 new cases annually, assist 14,000 with victim impact statements and accompany over 15,000 victims to court.

In 1987, six years after the murder, Ladyjustice and her mother each took turns and related individual impact statements directly to the presiding judge. Some people choose to “challenge” the defendant to make eye contact in an attempt to “show immediate respect.” Fat chance! This blogger didn’t even bother with that request!

Rather, I was mentally focused on how not to relinquish power to this serial murderer; not to give in to fear of retaliation; not to feel that you must look over your shoulder the rest of your life if you say this or that for fear of triggering a response… One cannot live life in fear, no matter what has been taken away! For if you do, the perpetrator has won.

He has the power!

Internet research revealed minimal information or samples of victim impact statements for general public consumption. There are no standard templates. However, the most basic of guidelines furnished by the Crime Victim Services Center in Washington State recommend discussion of the following general topics: ‘With a couple of my suggestions thrown in…

1) How the perpetrator’s criminal behavior has effected the victim(s) physically, emotionally and financially;

2) Discuss any concerns regarding personal safety and security;

3) “Provide suggestions for a resolution that is fair, that will give the offender the opportunity to take responsibility for actions that caused loss or harm.”

[ Surely you jest if you are talking about felony charges. Taking responsibility – What’s that? And…. how do you spell pre-determined plea bargain?? ]

More specifically, other factors to contemplate when composing your impact statement –

1) How have your feelings changed about life in general, your lifestyle; your ability to relate to others, your ability to cope and need for support or counseling?

2) If you have sustained physical injuries, what were they and how long did they last? Are they continuing? How have your injuries impacted your ability to perform everyday tasks and recreational activities?

The “Aftermath” Questions

What about your ability to:

1) Maintain your general health;

2) Eat, sleep, concentrate;

3) Have other ailments “appeared out of the blue?”

4) Have your relationships with family members, co-workers and “society in general” changed?

5) Are you unable to trust others now?

6) Do you feel a sense of intimacy with your significant other?

7) What changes have occurred with your employer? Are they flexible in allowing you to attend court appearances, counseling and medical appointments?

8) What is your financial status currently?

9) Are you able to be productive?

10) Do you have hope for the future?

The above list is certainly not all inclusive…but rather covers the general landscape.

A Word of Two from …..The National Center for Victims of Crime

In addition, results of the National Center for Victims of Crime’s public opinion poll also revealed that 55% of Americans feel that sentences handed down to criminals by the court are too lenient.

Perhaps this is why seven out of 10 Americans believe that it is very important for the judicial system to provide victims and their families with “…an opportunity to make a statement prior to the sentencing of the offender about how the crime has affected them.”

In essence, for the court to impose fair and just sentences, it is critical that information be provided to the sentencing and paroling authorities on the emotional, financial and physical impact of crime – information that only victims can accurately define and provide through the use of victim impact statements.

Clearly the criminal justice system is ready, as is the American public, for the permanent infusion of victim impact statements into the justice process. We must now make the use of victim impact statements functional and consistent within the criminal justice system.

Comprehensive guidelines, protocol and model victim impact statement instruments must be drafted that address the needs of both the justice system and the victim. Victims must be systematically and consistently made aware of their right to submit victim impact statements and the statement’s application within the system. To accomplish this goal, each criminal justice agency that has contact with crime victims must have comprehensive agency guidelines and protocol that outline the roles and responsibilities of each staff member in the notification, distribution, collection and application of the victim impact statements.

Making a Case for Specialized Victim Impact Statements

Approximately a year ago, this author had a “brainstorming” idea to offer a service to future victims of crime regarding the creation of individually tailored victim impact statements for the following reasons:

1) Not everyone is a wordsmith nor are they able to express their thoughts and feelings in writing (even before the crime occurred);

2) The emotional impact of the experience including recounting the events, facing the defendant and his supporters, the finality of the process; the outcome of the verdict; the absence of their loved one. can incapacitate a victim and not allow him or her to complete their presentation. [ Of course there are options such as mailing letters to the judge, allowing another relative or the prosecutor to read etc…. However, it is sometimes a poor substitute and the impact may not be experienced in the same way]

3) If the victim is capable of sharing his/her private thoughts and feelings with an Advocate who is also a skilled writer, the burden is lessened. If such a writer were to create a series of questions specifically designed to elicit information to portray the deceased person in a way that honors them and is meaningful to the family… How Wonderful!

4) The possibility of a videotaped presentation or a video memorial tribute could go a long way in helping the judge to understand the enormity of their loss.

Currently no specific companies specializing in videotaped victim impact statements could be located via internet search. What a shame….

The problem.. and the beauty of this idea is that people are not “one size fits all” and therefore victim impact statements should not be mass produced as in a “sausage factory.” They are too personal…too important.

The words potentially have the power to alter sentencing!

But, who would provide the service? Who would fund it? Who would keep track of the data comparing customized statements to those that are essentially “fill in the blank essays”? Could this idea come to fruition? Why not?

Heed the advice of the National Center for Victims of Crime. Do not let victim impact statements become an afterthought!

I welcome other input concerning this idea. Until then, Thorence Brey features a series of videotaped Victim Impact Statements for your viewing interest at:

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xkikdy_victim-impact-statements-thorance-brey_news


To read more about Donna R. Gore and learn more about "LadyJustice," refer to her website: www.donnagore.com Donna is the host of SHATTERED LIVES each Saturday at 5ET.




Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Living in an Echo Chamber Distorts Reality



by Barry Goldstein

Many Republicans, including their leaders were shocked at the outcome of the recent elections. They had attacked pollsters who turned out to be accurate and never imagined their own information could be so wrong. This is exactly what happens when you limit yourself to information that comes from biased and unscientific sources. Significantly, the custody court system is headed for a similar shock. They have been relying for many years on the same small group of “experts” and thus far have failed to be open to reforms based on extensive scientific research that proves their standard practices frequently place children at risk.

Republicans and conservatives have been limiting their sources of information to Fox News, extreme talk radio shows like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, radical right wing blogs and columnists and similar unreliable sources. This has led to widespread belief in utter nonsense such as claims Obama was not born in the U.S., is a Muslim, the new health law has death panels, climate change is bogus, Saddam Hussein was responsible for the 9-11 terrorist attack and was building large stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction. Exit polls from Republican primaries found large numbers of voters who believed these lies. Our system of democracy and free speech is based on the belief that in the marketplace for ideas accurate information supported by research and reality will minimize these kinds of baseless beliefs. The problem is that large parts of the right wing community refuse to listen or pay attention to any sources of information that do not contain an extreme conservative bias.

The problems with the custody court response to domestic violence started when they adopted practices based on popular beliefs at a time when no research was available. This led courts to rely on mental health professionals who had little or no understanding, much less expertise about domestic violence issues. Although this was a new public issue neither the courts nor the mental health professionals made any attempts to determine how the recommendations and decisions were working for children. The evaluators had strong and misplaced confidence in their ability to understand what they thought were psychological issues and courts assumed their decisions were correct based on stare decisis. Over time the problem became worse because lawyers, some of whom later became judges spent their legal careers hearing misinformation from unqualified professionals. The problem was exacerbated by the development of a cottage industry of lawyers and psychologists who sought to represent “fathers’ rights” approaches because abusive fathers seeking custody as a tactic to maintain control have control of the family assets.

Other community organizations changed their practices as new research and information became available to inform the response to domestic violence. Police departments moved from a practice of separating the parties and having the abuser walk around the block to cool off, to a pro-arrest policy based on research that in 95% of domestic violence homicides by men, the police had been called to the home previously on average five times. In other words the standard practice was not working so it was changed. The custody courts however still have not sought to develop reforms based on the specialized body of domestic violence research that is now available. Many judges have refused to listen to domestic violence experts or else paid little attention to their testimony. Findings that custody courts get a large portion of domestic violence cases wrong which has resulted in thousands of children’s deaths and ruining hundreds of thousands of children’s lives have not resulted in the needed reforms. Some of the worst judges have been downright hostile to scientific research that undermines their beliefs and biases.

These widespread unscientific beliefs and practices have led court professionals to believe a lot of misinformation. This has included support for alienation theories that are based on the belief that sex between adults and children is acceptable. The recent U. S. Department of Justice study by Dr. Daniel Saunders found that evaluators, judges and lawyers without the specific training they need tended to believe the myth that women frequently make false allegations of abuse and that attempts by mothers to protect their children are actually harmful to the children. These mistaken beliefs regularly lead to outcomes that hurt children.

Senator Patrick Moynihan famously said that everyone is entitled to their own opinion but not their own facts. A lot of harm has been caused by practices used by extreme right wing conservatives and the court system. This article will examine several of the common misjudgments. There are overlaps such as the propaganda against climate change is based both on ideology and a failure to consider scientific research. So too is the use of Parental Alienation Syndrome which has harmed so many children. The outcomes of the recent elections that Republicans viewed as unfavorable have caused some talk of a need to consider other sources of information. They can give other causes for the devastation caused by recent catastrophic storms affected by global warning but cannot avoid the impact of losing the elections.

One would think the frequency that children are murdered by abusive fathers involved in contested custody cases would force the court system to reconsider its outdated and flawed practices. Professor Dianne Bartlow and her students interviewed many judges and other court officials to learn what reforms they are creating in response to the 175 children murdered by abusive fathers involved in contested custody in a recent two year period. This research was performed for a chapter in the second volume of Domestic Violence, Abuse and Child Custody. I think it is fair to say that the judges who agreed to participate are among the better judges. They took the time to be interviewed because they are interested in domestic violence and care about how it impacts children. While many were open to using new research, there was no indication the court system is seeking to create the significant reforms that are needed to better protect children. These judge frequently expressed incredulity that courts would send children to live with abusers. This is something that these judges would try hard to avoid, but they were often unaware of the extreme and harmful practices by many of their colleagues who are caught up in the echo chamber of misinformation and bias.

Hostility to Scientific Research

Perhaps the incident that best illustrates the Republican disdain for science is that they placed Todd Akin on the House Science Committee. He was the Republican Senate candidate in Missouri who claimed that women have ways to avoid pregnancy from a “legitimate rape.” He actually got this nonsense from a medical doctor involved in campaigns to deny women their right to an abortion. Obviously, abortion is a moral issue and reasonable people can have differing views, but using false and offensive information to support their views ought to be off base

The scientific evidence of global warming is now overwhelming. It can be measured by higher temperatures, melting ice and glaciers and rising sea levels. It seems we are facing storms of the century every couple of years. The problem is that reducing the harm of global warming would require adopting environmental regulations and practices that go against conservative ideology. In response industry lobbying groups and other ideologues have paid for “research” by scientists who are deniers to try to create the illusion that there is reason to disbelieve the findings of global warming caused by human activity. Those with a financial interest in preventing the needed responses publicize misinformation to undermine the findings about global warming. Those who receive all their information from unreliable right-wing sources hear only that global warming is unreal or unproven. The major storms we have witnessed are seen as exceptions. Issues around economics, environment and creationism are other examples of the hostility to current scientific research.

While many judges know PAS has no scientific basis, the lives of thousands of children have been destroyed by other judges who permitted arguments based on PAS. The theory was concocted by Richard Gardner, based not on any research but rather his personal experiences, beliefs and biases. I believe it is significant that PAS is often used to deny allegations of sexual abuse despite the fact that Gardner made many statements to the effect that sex between adults and children can be acceptable. Significantly, PAS is based on the assumption that virtually all allegations of abuse by mothers are false, but the actual research demonstrates that deliberately false complaints by mothers occur less than two percent of the time.

Another common example of courts failing to consider current scientific research concerns the widespread reliance on psychological tests that were not made for the populations seen in family court. Under the best of circumstances these tests are accurate only 55-65% of the time, but the circumstances during contested custody and particularly domestic violence are far from favorable making the tests substantially less reliable.

We now have substantial scientific research that confirms complaints by protective mothers that courts responding to domestic violence are getting a high percentage of custody cases wrong. Our book, Domestic Violence, Abuse and Child Custody was designed to make it easier for court professionals to benefit from the available research by putting it together in one resource from the leading experts in the U.S. and Canada. Although some judges have been open to this information, we have seen many cases in which court professionals seek to block this information from becoming part of the record because the research undermines the practices and findings in those courts. The release of the U.S. Department of Justice study by Dr. Daniel Saunders was more recent, but thus far the court system has not demonstrated an interest in embracing the findings that explain how the widespread lack of training by evaluators and other court professionals about specific domestic violence topics repeatedly place children in jeopardy. It is particularly disconcerting that many court professionals seem hostile to scientific research because it establishes the problems with present practices. Practices that pathologize safe, protective mothers, assume mothers frequently make false allegations, denial of gender bias and tolerance for the extreme results described in the Saunders’ study are other common examples of the court’s lack of acceptance of current scientific research.

Tolerance of Bullies and Retaliation

In many ways, the election really started with the attempt of Georgetown Law student Sandra Fluke to testify before Congress about Republican attempts to restrict the availability of contraceptive medicines. The Republicans on the committee refused to hear testimony from Ms. Fluke as they were uninterested in information that would undermine their position. She was able to testify before a committee convened by Democrats and made an important scientific point that some of the medications in question are commonly used for health purposes in addition to contraception.

Rush Limbaugh thought that Ms. Fluke’s decision to advocate for a position he disagreed with justified attacking her in the most personal and offensive manner including references to her sexual activities. Although some Republicans criticized his abusive behavior, most refused to fully condemn his unacceptable behavior because they were afraid of being attacked by the leading Republican bully. Mitt Romney, for example limited himself to saying he would not use that language.

Limbaugh’s use of personal attacks against people he disagrees with is not unusual, but what is especially offensive were attacks on someone who is not a public figure with the ability to respond to his attacks, and the use of the most sexist slurs in public that make all women less safe. Other conservative radio hosts use similar attacking approaches and this has led to primary challenges against conservatives viewed as not extreme enough. The tolerance of these tactics by party leaders serves to silence discussion of complex issues and discourage conservatives from considering scientific research that does not support the extreme positions taken by Limbaugh and his supporters.

By definition, custody courts responding to domestic violence are dealing with bullies and too often allow these abusers to continue or even use the courts to further their abuse. Even worse, we have seen judges viciously attack domestic violence survivors and retaliate when they continue to believe abuse allegations the court failed to recognize or punish victims for their criticism of the courts. Significantly, in attempting to punish women the courts are also punishing the children.

These extremely harmful practices are at work in cases that Dr. Saunders referenced as harmful outcomes. These are cases where safe, protective mothers who are the primary attachment figures lose custody to alleged abusers and are limited to supervised or no visitation. These outcomes are always wrong because the harm of separating children from their primary attachment figure, which includes depression, low self-esteem and suicide when older is far greater than any benefit the court believes it is providing. This establishes the court was using deeply flawed practices and frequently the outcome created by the court is based on failing to recognize true allegations of abuse is the exact opposite of the arrangement that would be in the best interests of children. The Saunders’ study found that in many of these cases the court professionals pathologized safe mothers, failed to give fair consideration to her abuse allegations or recognize the risk the alleged abuser presented.

A recent public example of a court making this mistake occurred in the Natalie Khawam case. Natalie is the twin sister of Jill Kelley whose complaints about harassing emails led to the revelation of the affair involving General Petraeus. The press revealed that General Petraeus and General Allen wrote letters to the judge in support of Ms. Khawam accurately telling the court what a wonderful mother she is. Some of the media quoted statements from the court’s findings claiming the mother was a liar who had made false allegations of abuse. The reporters never bothered to speak to any domestic violence experts which would have led them to learn that the court created the kind of extreme outcome Dr. Saunders found is always harmful to children. In practice these outcomes are created because the court used flawed practices and courts often create findings that are the opposite of reality. In the Khawam case they relied on an evaluator with a “fathers’ rights” bias who has victimized many other mothers. Although Natalie Khawam is a successful attorney and has done well in other parts of her life, she was pathologized by this evaluator. Dr. Saunders’ found this is a common mistake by evaluators with inadequate training. Significantly the court never provided a full opportunity to present the domestic violence evidence and then assumed she was lying because they did have the training to properly screen for domestic violence. Cases in which the mother is pathologized because she has trouble dealing with a father she views as abusive and a court unwilling to protect the child, in the context of adaptive responses in the rest of her life are generally wrong.

We are also concerned about the retaliation bad judges have engaged in against lawyers and other court professionals. In my case the judge and his colleagues were so hostile to battered women that a committee authorized by the county legislature found that many victims were unwilling to enter the courts because they so frequently helped abusers. This led to a series of domestic violence homicides and calls for reform. Despite the problems caused by one of the worst judges, my license was suspended in part because I made a motion seeking to recuse the judge and move the case out of Dutchess County. They were offended when I offered to help train court professionals in order to better protect children. We will see if the appellate court will correct their error based on the findings of the legislative committee and the US Dept. of Justice study both of which are incompatible with the court’s findings in support of their abusive colleague.

Failure to Hear the Other Side

It was not only the flawed polls constantly referenced in the conservative echo chamber that made the actual results so shocking. For at least four years President Obama was politically and personally attacked in the most vicious and inaccurate manner. The health care law was attacked as if it was some radical socialist measure far outside the mainstream and its provisions were falsified. In reality a liberal approach would have been a one-payer system. A more moderate alternative might have been the approach used but with competition from a government alternative to health insurance which would have pressured the insurance companies to limit costs and provide good service. Instead, the final outcome was based on proposals originally made by conservatives. Whatever the differences people had on the merits, the widespread notion that this was a radical proposal had no factual basis.

Throughout the last four years, letters to the editor, social media posts and even some parts of the media constantly attacked the President in the most personal and uncivil terms. Many of the baseless attacks suggested he was not a “real” American. This included unquestionably false claims that he was born outside the country and is a Muslim. In many cases code words were used to pander to racist tendencies. While it is reasonable for opponents to disagree with some of his policies, President Obama is unquestionably a good family man, who has avoided any valid hint of personal scandal, arguably saved the country from what easily could have been a depression and helped eliminate our number one enemy. Those in the echo chamber could not see these realities so never imagined he would be reelected.

The widespread failure of the custody court system to fairly consider all information about domestic violence cases might be summed up by one of the typical extreme cases that work so poorly for children. The evaluator pointed out that the judge, law guardian; evaluators, child protective caseworker and visitation supervisors all disagreed with the mother. The evaluator suggested the mother’s belief they were all wrong suggests there is something wrong with her mental health. In reality all of these professionals turned out not to have the specific training recommended by the Saunders’ report, used practices and beliefs that have been shown to harm children and created an outcome the Saunders’ study and other research demonstrates is always wrong.

When, New York State wanted to investigate its response to contested divorce they created a Matrimonial Commission. Although 90% of contested custody involves domestic violence, the committee was filled with members of the legal profession lacking the necessary domestic violence expertise. It would have made more sense for the commission to be co-sponsored with the New York State Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence. This would have provided the commission with information and insight to make choices to better protect children. Instead we often see judges seek to keep information and testimony out of the record that would undermine the conclusions they intend to make. Judges are then shocked by research and criticisms that suggest the courts are doing a poor job protecting children.

Widespread Beliefs that are Clearly Wrong

In this section, I am not referencing differences in opinion. Someone could believe it is clearly wrong to permit an abortion or that it is clearly wrong for the government to tell a woman what she can do with her body. Instead I am speaking about factual issues for which there is no legitimate basis to dispute. When Todd Akin made his statement that victims of “legitimate rape” have a way to avoid pregnancy in the context of a discussion of whether there should be an exception to abortion restrictions for victims of rape and incest his statement was unquestionably wrong. While many Republicans rejected the false statement, there remained many others who continued to believe this misinformation.

The statements that President Obama was not born in the United States and that he is a Muslim are clearly false. Although some Republican and conservative leaders have denounced these lies, the conservative echo chamber and some Republican leaders continue to repeat the lies or treat it as a legitimate question. Significantly, many mostly Republican voters said they believed these false statements.

During the Bush administration, the echo chamber and many administration officials including the Vice President repeated lies that Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and played a role in targeting the United States in the 9-11 terrorist attack. These lies were used to rally support for the war in Iraq. Even after no weapons of mass destruction could be found, large numbers of voters continued to believe this misinformation.

Perhaps the most serious false claim in the custody courts is the widespread belief that women frequently make false complaints in order to gain an advantage in litigation. The statement could be phrased as an opinion, but there is solid research the deliberately false allegations by women are rare. The Bala study found the rate of false allegations by women to be 1.3%. There are other valid studies with somewhat variable numbers, but they all agree such deliberate false allegations are rare. Significantly, the Saunders’ study found that evaluators and other court professionals with inadequate training tended to believe mothers frequently made false allegations and this led to decisions that were harmful to children. Some of these beliefs are made in good faith by people who failed to recognize true allegations because of inadequate training, have trouble believing how often men abuse women or have repeatedly heard this misinformation. Other professionals and abuser groups deliberately repeat this misinformation in order to support their beliefs and promote business. Significantly alienation theories are based on the belief virtually all allegations of abuse by women are false. That is the equivalent of putting the lie on steroids and grossly distorts reality. Particularly disturbing were reports by Judge Deann Salcido, who was a judge in California, that during judicial trainings judges were advised to be skeptical of mother’s abuse allegations in the context of contested litigation. It is not surprising that many judges believe this misinformation. The Saunders’ study found that inadequately trained judges often believe this myth. This is one of the problems that are caused when judges receive training only from other judges or people without domestic violence expertise. Anyone who believes or acts on the basis of this myth should be disqualified from handling domestic violence cases.

We often hear evaluators and judges give custody or unprotected visitation to an abuser because he “only” hit her couple of times, has not assaulted her recently or he has not hurt her since they separated and no longer had physical access. These mistakes are usually not deliberate but it is based on misinformation that his abuse is caused by the relationship or something she did rather than his belief system. Court professionals who do not understand domestic violence dynamics frequently make this dangerous error. Men abuse women based on their belief that they are entitled to control their partner and a sense of entitlement to make the major decisions in the relationship. There is no reason to believe the end of the relationship will change his beliefs and in most contested custody cases the litigation and attempt to gain custody are continuations of his coercive tactics. Inevitably, if the abuser receives custody or unprotected visitation the children will witness him abusing future partners.

Many professionals, who should know better, believe domestic violence is caused by substance abuse and mental illness. Certainly men with substance abuse and mental illness problems commit domestic violence. These problems may undermine normal inhibitions so their abuse is more severe and memorable, but with rare exceptions would not cause men who would never otherwise consider acting abusively to engage in domestic violence. Court professionals may require or encourage men to obtain treatment for substance abuse and emotional problems. This is a good thing. The problem is when they believe this solves the domestic violence issues and fail to take additional actions to hold him accountable. These must be treated as separate problems and failure to respond to domestic violence makes it likely his abusive behaviors will continue.

In a speech, Sir Nicholas Wall, one of the leading British family judges said the worst thing for a child is for the mother to make negative statements about the father. I don’t mean to take this literally as I am sure he didn’t mean that killing or sexually assaulting the child is less harmful. Rather, his statement was based on popular misinformation that children need both parents equally. Children need their primary attachment figure more than the other parent and the safe parent more than the abusive one. Children also benefit from living with the parent with superior parenting skills. The judge’s statement is part of a pattern of treating alienation allegations as more important than it is to the well being of children. Certainly alienation and negative statements are harmful and should be avoided. Truthful, statements such as being honest about the father’s abuse is beneficial for children because it helps them understand that such behavior is not acceptable in our society. The problem is that abuser groups have used alienation theories as a common tactic to minimize abuse allegations. Court professionals routinely make statements about the harm of “alienation” that are not based on any valid research. This serves to take the court’s emphasis away from issues that are more important for children which is exactly the purpose of most alienation claims.

Reliance on Ideology over Practicality

At the start of the Clinton administration, the Democrats passed a tax increase in order to help balance the budget and restore the economy. Republicans opposed this because it is against their ideology to support tax increases. At the time, Senator Phil Graham and other Republican leaders predicted the decision would lead to a terrible recession and increase in the deficit. The actual results were very different as the economy became strong and we actually enjoyed budget surpluses by the end of the Clinton presidency. Certainly, economists and politicians can have a sincere difference about economic policy but there are times when more revenue is needed. Appeals to ideology that ignore history undermines the ability of leaders to make the compromises necessary to keep the economy running strong.

The refusal to support measures designed to avoid the most harmful effects of global warming have similarly been thwarted by ideology. The easing of financial regulations led to many of the bankruptcies that helped devastate the economy. Again this was based on the ideology against regulation although in fairness many Democrats joined in this mistake. Another example of ideology trumping pragmatism is the use of money for abstinence programs in schools instead of sex education. Interestingly many people anxious to spend money they believe will discourage children from having sex with other children have been unwilling to promote the kind of reforms that would prevent courts from sending children to live with adult sexual predators.

The standard for awarding custody and visitation is the best interests of the children. One of the problems with this standard is that it has encouraged a very subjective view of what is best for children. If these decisions had been divorced from ideology, the first priority would have been the safety of children. Any other consideration pales in comparison to keeping children safe. This would mean that courts would be focused not only on preventing direct abuse or neglect that create an immediate risk of harm, but also arrangements that make It more likely the children will place themselves in danger. This would include concerns about separating children from their primary attachment figures or exposing children to parents who have committed domestic violence.

Instead of focusing on issues that impact children’s safety, the courts regularly focus on less important considerations based on ideology and in doing so often increase the risk to children. Many courts have created a prime focus regarding “high conflict” issues. Although 90% of contested custody involve domestic violence abusers seeking custody to maintain control, many court professionals have been taught to treat these as “high conflict” cases. This means that they treat the abusers’ coercive tactics and the victim’s survival and protective response as mutual problems. The expectation of finding mutual issues, and lack of training in risk assessment and screening for domestic violence, lead to frequent failures of courts to recognize valid allegations of abuse. Protective mothers are routinely pressured to cooperate with their abusers and severely punished for continuing to believe he is dangerous. The same courts fail to pressure the fathers to stop their abuse which would be the best solution for the children. Widespread beliefs that view contested disputes as mutual and the desire to treat both parents equally (regardless of past parenting) help abusers and harm children.

Understanding the ideology in family courts that is biased in favor of fathers can be difficult to understand because it occurs in three different ways. Much of the bias is unintended and occurs without the participants realizing they are doing it. There have been 40 states with court-sponsored gender bias committees and many other judicial districts. They have all shown widespread bias against women and particularly women litigants. Most commonly, mothers are faced with higher standards of proof, given less credibility and blamed for the actions of their abuser. This occurs when court professionals focus on the mothers’ normal response to the fathers’ abuse such as trying to protect the children from him instead of forcing him to stop. Instead of taking aggressive action to prevent gender bias, most courts have ignored the problem and often retaliate against anyone who points out a biased response. This discourages reports of bias and thus makes it harder for judges to avoid these mistakes.

Many judges recognize that mothers have closer relationships with their children because they have been more involved in their care, but believe it is important for children to have their fathers in their lives, and so bend over backwards to favor fathers. This is generally done in good faith thinking this benefits the children. The problem is that a large majority of contested custody are abusive fathers whose involvement as abusers is not beneficial to the children. The favoritism only supports their sense of entitlement and makes it less likely they will make the changes necessary to become good fathers.

Even worse is the cottage industry of evaluators and lawyers who understand that in contested custody cases it is the abusive father that controls most of the family resources. Accordingly the best way to earn large incomes is to develop practices to support abusers. We often see these professionals advertise as “fathers’ rights” advocates, but when the court appoints them as GALs or evaluators they are treated as if they were neutral professionals. When these charlatans are appointed, children and protective mothers have little chance of obtaining a safe outcome. Most judges are trying to do the right thing by children, but there are judges who support a “fathers’ rights” ideology and sense of entitlement. These are the judges who create the most harmful outcomes of custody for the abuser and supervised or no visitation for the safe, protective mother. These are the cases the Saunders’ study found are always harmful to children.

We constantly see cases in which abusive fathers use alienation and friendly parent claims to obtain custody from the protective mother who has been the primary attachment figure. Court professionals confidently predict that the father will promote the relationship between the mother and children, but as soon as he gains control denies her visitation and ultimately destroys the relationship. This is exactly what abusive fathers would be expected to do. They only sought custody as a way to punish her for leaving or complaining about his abuse. This interference with the mother’s relationship should confirm the mother’s concerns were accurate, but courts that are quick to threaten and punish mothers for trying to protect children from dangerous abusers do little or nothing when the mother’s relationship is interfered with. These are exactly the patterns that would help the court system see the problems with their response if only they could be open to the fact that they have a problem with their response to domestic violence cases.

False Sense of Equivalence

Early in the recent political campaign, two respected and objective journalists, Thomas E. Mann and Norman J. Ornstein wrote an important article that demonstrated the two parties are not equally responsible for the gridlock and other problems, but the media often blindly feels the need to criticize them equally in order to be seen as fair. In reality, Mann and Ornstein wrote, “The GOP has become an insurgent outlier in American politics. It is ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; unmoved by conventional understanding of facts, evidence and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.” This does not mean the Democrats are pure but the level of deliberate deceit and obstruction is much greater on the Republican side. The failure of most journalists to differentiate their approaches has only encouraged practices that poison the process.

When President Lyndon Johnson signed the civil rights law he said it would cost the Democrats any chance to win the southern states for a generation. Richard Nixon led the Republicans in taking advantage of racism for political gain. In the old days this could be done in blatant obvious ways, but now it is done more subtly. The lies about Obama not being born in the U.S. or being a Muslim are deliberately designed to emphasize the differences and encourage racist voting. The Romney campaign accused Obama of undermining the welfare reform law. This was blatantly false as what he did was to allow plans created by Republican governors to be tried. This was Romney’s subtle way of raising racial issues as was his “joke” referencing where he was born. Many people expressed deep offense at the suggestions that they supported Republicans because of racism. There were certainly non-racial reasons to support Republicans, but many people voted against Obama out of racism and many of their extreme statements confirmed this. The attempts to suppress voter turnout through voter ID laws was particularly reprehensible. There was no fraud problem and some of the Republican leaders even acknowledged the purpose was to help Romney win. It is hard to think of anything more un-American than seeking to prevent eligible voters from casting their ballot.

The debate over the health insurance law was particularly offensive. There is room for valid disagreements, but the conservative plan ultimately adopted could not justify the extreme attacks that took place. So often the complaints were completely divorced from reality. At one point Romney claimed that repeal of the law would not kill anyone despite neutral research that confirmed tens of thousands of people would die because of a lack of health insurance. Romney’s misleading point was that emergency rooms would care for someone in an emergency (albeit at far greater cost). The problem is the lack of early screening and treatment often made later treatment too late. We had a tragic example of this when we lost our dear friend Susan Murphy-Milano.

I have had the opportunity recently through interviews as part of research for upcoming books to hear the views of judges responding to custody cases. As with the Saunders’ study, the judges who agreed to take the time to speak about domestic violence issues tend to be the best and most caring judges so are not necessarily typical of the judges seen by protective mothers. These judges often spoke about excruciating choices where they believed (probably with cause) that both parents had significant limitations. Some expressed the belief this was a circumstance where giving custody to the abusive father was the lesser of evils. Many expressed the desire to help the mother recover custody. Clearly these are not the usual cases we see constantly.

It is important to recognize that custody judges see a much wider variety of cases than domestic violence advocates. Most cases are settled more or less amicably and judges need to encourage settlements or the system would collapse. Even cases involving domestic violence often are settled. The fathers still love their children and are not willing to deliberately harm them (obviously their abuse harms the children) by separating them from their mothers. These cases are often settled by mothers giving up needed support and resources in return for custody.

The biggest problem is the approximately 3.8% of cases that cannot be settled and will continue to trial and often far beyond that. Most of these cases cannot settle because they involve abusive fathers who are using the custody tactic to regain control over their victims after she left him and/or complained about his abuse. In many of these cases he has threatened to take the kids if she dared to leave him. It is important to understand that these cases involve the most dangerous abusers. These are men who believe she has no right to leave him. Nevertheless, it is often difficult for inadequately trained court professionals to recognize the danger he creates. These abusers are good at manipulation, often appear cooperative to outsiders and are successful in other parts of their lives. Many of these cases do not involve the kind of frequent or severe forms of physical assaults that unqualified professionals often associate with “real” domestic violence.

Nevertheless, these are the fathers who create the greatest risk to children and mothers. The belief that the mother has no right to leave is why 75% of women murdered by their heterosexual partners are killed after she left. It is why in a recent two year period, abusive fathers involved in contested custody killed 175 of their children. More commonly they seek to regain control through use of the custody process. They often come off as cooperative and promise to promote the relationship with the mother, but once they obtain control seek to destroy the relationship between the mother and children. In most of these cases the mother is the primary attachment figure which adds to the harm caused of separating children from their mothers.

Domestic violence experts agree that the arrangement that works best for children in domestic violence cases is custody for the safe parent and at least initially supervised visitation for the abuser. The Saunders’ study found that courts do not require supervised visitation as often as they should. Part of the problem is that the arrangement that works best for children is not something an abuser will agree to. Indeed anything short of a form of shared parenting, which is never appropriate in a domestic violence case, is unlikely to produce a settlement. In most cases even if the abuser does not win custody, he is likely to receive unsupervised visitation so he has no incentive to compromise. As a result we constantly see courts using their authority to pressure mothers to cooperate with their abusers instead of taking steps to make him stop his abuse. Standard abuser legal tactics include substantial litigation designed to bankrupt the mother. Courts rarely look to litigation abuse as a continuation of his pattern of coercive and controlling behavior or require him to pay some of her expenses in order to level the playing field.

Many factors in these cases lead court professionals to treat abusive fathers and their victims as if they were roughly equally responsible for the problems in the family and the inability to resolve custody and related issues. The inadequate domestic violence training leads professionals to disbelieve valid abuse complaints and minimize the very real dangers. “High conflict” approaches and desire to promote settlement encourage judges and others to treat the parties equally. The widespread belief that children need both parents (regardless of the past history of parenting and abuse) further supports the false equivalency. On some level judges think fairness requires the court to treat the parties the same. The reality, however, is that children do not need both parents equally. They need their primary attachment figure more than the other parent and the safe parent more than the abusive one. Approaches that treat unequal parents the same are not in the best interests on children. Even worse, when an abused mother continues to distrust the father, court professionals often punish her in ways that harm children.

Conclusion

In this article, I have been critical of the GOP and the nation’s custody courts, not because I want them to fail, but because they have an important role to play. They cannot benefit the community if they continually act based on obvious misinformation and false claims. At least some part of the harm caused by this delusional approach became clear to Republicans when they badly lost an election they confidently believed they would win. They could continue to deny the role of global warning despite the ever more frequent catastrophes like Katrina and Sandy, but cannot pretend they are going to inaugurate Mitt Romney as the next president. We knew that living in an echo chamber did not benefit the country and it turns out it is also harmful to the electoral position of Republicans and conservatives.

The pretend world often occupied by court professionals is probably a lot less deliberate on the part of court professionals than Republican politicians. They started receiving misinformation from mental health professionals who never understood domestic violence at a time when no research was available. The problem has been that once research became available the courts have been extremely defensive in responding to criticism. On many occasions the worst judges have responded to criticisms with retaliation against protective mothers and the rare professional who supports them. The common practice of courts deferring to the trial judge has prevented accountability regarding the most harmful decisions. This is one reason the most common question I receive is how to find a good attorney to help protective mothers. Many attorneys are afraid to present evidence of domestic violence that they believe the judge does not want to hear. This is a disaster for the court system because it means judges never have a chance to hear the information they need to make good decisions.

Inevitably the bad practices lead to avoidable catastrophes. In the numerous cases in which bad court decisions lead to the murder of children and mothers, the courts have largely treated the tragedy as an exception and made little effort to see the pattern of these tragic outcomes. In Dutchess County, New York, a custody court system that strongly favored abusive fathers and often seemed like a pretend world to battered mothers contributed to a series of domestic violence homicides. The county legislature asked a committee of law enforcement, social service, legal and domestic violence professionals to investigate the county’s response to domestic violence. The committee found that many battered women stopped going to court to seek protection because they found the courts were siding with their abusers and making their situation even more dangerous. What can be worse for the effectiveness and reputation of the courts than victims refusing to seek court intervention? These decisions were not made as some sort of attack on the courts but rather an intelligent attempt to make the least harmful decision about their very survival. I believe it is long past time for custody courts to take a fresh look at its response to domestic violence that is informed by the specialized body of research that is now available. They will learn as the Saunders’ study found that they need expertise in specific topics like screening for domestic violence, risk assessment, post-separation violence and the effects of domestic violence on children. The experts on these and other critical topics are not psychologists, but domestic violence experts. This is another reason why the multi-disciplinary approach we used in Domestic Violence, Abuse and Child Custody is so important for a realistic understanding of these cases.




Barry Goldstein is a nationally recognized domestic violence expert, speaker, writer and consultant. He is the co-editor with Mo Therese Hannah of DOMESTIC VIOLENCE, ABUSE and CHILD CUSTODY. His next book, Representing the Domestic Violence Survivor, co authored with Elizabeth Liu is designed to train attorneys to present domestic violence cases and should be published early next year. Barry can be reached by email from their web site www.Domesticviolenceabuseandchildcustody.com

Monday, December 10, 2012

Continuing on the Path





by Todd Blumhorst

I can’t walk another step on this path. I am not sure how much more I can bear. We will never find answers. If you are a long term cold case homicide or missing persons survivor, then you have probably said one of these phrases or something very similar in your head on many occasions. The weight of the unknown can be a perilous path to walk and defeat is forever brooding over your head. The unknown is always there of your waking moments, jabbing you in the side to constantly reminding you of its presence.

I can relate to that constant reminder in the case of my missing sister. I have had to live in the unknown for 22 years now; that is over half of my life. I have had to do a lot of self-advocacy for our family due to many factors with the law enforcement agency in charge of her case. There have been many times when the cards were stacked against me in my continuing search for answers. There were many times when I wanted to just give up and stop looking for answers. Many nights I would toss and turn in bed wondering how much more would be added to my plate. People have often told me that God trusts us and only gives us what we can handle; I really wish God didn’t trust me so much if this is the case. How does one go forward when faced with mountainous obstacles placed before them to obtain case resolution? When you are the survivor of a long term case where either the killer and or the remains of your loved one remain unknown it becomes difficult to “move on” with your life. The thought of going forward is a terrifying concept for our brains to manage and process.

In my situation, finding a stable grounding was the first hurdle to overcome. I was 16 when she left us and I was already dealing with teen problems and then one huge adult problem was placed in all of our laps. We never imagined having to live this nightmare and my parents did a great job of keeping me on track even though they were blinded by grief. After a while, Veronica wasn’t really brought up around the house and this upset me to no end. I would try to talk about her but the grimaces I would get when she was mentioned gave me the feeling that I was imposing too much on people around me.

As the years passed, I grew older and became involved in a long term relationship; I had hope for some sort of salvation by being able to talk to my partner about Veronica. It soon became evident quickly that he didn’t want to listen to me about my sister either and was asked to not discuss her death with him because it made him feel uncomfortable. I felt lost and didn’t know what to do next because her case had grown cold by this point and no one seemed to care. In hindsight, it’s not that people didn’t care- it was that the pain was so deep that it instilled actual fear in the people of our community. It was when I moved to Tucson where relief came and I found Homicide Survivors. I was finally able to tell my story uninterrupted.

After some time of working on my own grief, I gathered the strength to push for answers in her case. It was out of sheer love for my sister and a sense of justice that propelled me further down the path. It has always been an uphill battle in her case but I always kept the main goal in mind: find her body and advocate for justice for her. Earlier this year I decided that since her case was no longer active I would need to reignite the case with a search. I secured a private organization that performs canine searches for human remains who agreed to assist us in a search. I directed them to a couple of areas we have always suspected to be a potential burial site. We went to the first location and it was quickly determined there were no human remains present; it seemed that another hurdle had been placed before me. We then went to the second site which was quite larger and got two hits within 30 minutes, hope was ignited again that she would soon be found. We are in another holding pattern presently while the leaves and ground in the area dry up and the team can arrange a grid search with more dogs. Hopefully this part of the path is upon us and we start down the path to justice for Veronica.

It is important to me to obtain justice for Veronica; just as you do in your individual cases I am certain. In those moments when doubt creeps into your mind and you feel justice will never come, take a few deep breaths and realize that you can only do your best and much of the situation is out of your control. The love you had for them will be your driver in seeking justice, but don’t beat yourself up should you encounter obstacles. What I have learned in this continuing journey is that our loved ones hear us and they know we are trying to balance the scales of justice. I may not get discovery of her remains or justice, but I keep moving forward and trying to reach that goal and my love for her will sustain me on this journey.


Todd J. Blumhorst, Advocate,
Assistant Volunteer Coordinator

Homicide Survivors Inc.
32 N. Stone Ave. #1408
Tucson, Az. 85701

520.740.5729
azhomicidesurvivors.org
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