T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
509.1 | My thoughts | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Mon Oct 12 1987 13:30 | 10 |
| The rule of thumb I was taught is that if a child claims abuse and
incest, it is true. That no child lies about such a thing.
I am less sure about the adult, however. Inclination is still to
believe the allegations: I don't think any mother would set her
daughter up to get the scars it is claimed Nicole now has. Those
scars would have to come from somewhere, and no matter how crazy
Virginia is or isn't I don't think she helped put them there.
Lee
|
509.2 | Had to be reason | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Mon Oct 12 1987 13:58 | 4 |
| I haven't seen or heard all the facts but there must have
been a damn good reason for that woman to go to jail.
Especially the Framingham one!
|
509.3 | | BEES::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Oct 12 1987 13:44 | 2 |
| re -1
don't bet on it.
|
509.4 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Mon Oct 12 1987 14:07 | 14 |
| re .2:
"contempt of court". When ordered by the court to produce the child,
she refused, disobeying a lawful court order for which the punishment
is usually confinement until willing to comply with the order. (or,
in this case, until the issue becomes moot; the child has been
recovered).
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
509.5 | Courts not cutting it | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | Justine | Mon Oct 12 1987 14:10 | 15 |
|
I believe that at least one Social Worker in Mass. confirmed the
abuse charges be*fore* the mother and daughter ever left the state.
The judge went against the Social Worker's recommendations in allowing
the father continued visits with the daughter. (At the very least,
the judge could have ordered only supervised visits while the matter
was under investigation.) It was only after the system failed,
that Virginia fled with her daughter. I suspect that we will see
more and more of these kinds of cases unless the courts start doing
a better job of handling child custody issues. Children are often
left in abusive situations even when social workers have warned
the courts of the danger to the child. I applaud the mother's courage
in protecting her daughter from further abuse.
Justine
|
509.6 | | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Mon Oct 12 1987 14:12 | 3 |
| I meant a reason as in why she refused to obey-not the
process.
|
509.7 | Free ? | FDCV10::IWANOWICZ | Deacons are Permanent | Mon Oct 12 1987 14:43 | 39 |
| Interesting about 'Contempt' issues ..... Susan Wornick [ Channel
5 reporter ] is ordered to jail for not informing the court of her
confidential source on a story. She is applauded. A Boston Herald
reporter went througha similar scenario a few years ago. He was
generally praised.
Virginia LaLonde stands up to the court and the system that she
believes failed her and her daughter. She spends significantly
more time in jail than either ms. Wornick or Paul Corsetti [
Herald reporter ]. Stories in the Globe and Herald provide
opinions from 'experts' that either support or criticize the
jailing of Virginia LaLonde - depending on the feelings of the
experts.
As Lee T. says, ... it is pretty hard to understand why the child
and mother would continue take the stand they do without some
reason..............
People protest and suffer the consequences thereof generally when
there is a strong principle and issue worth the protest. I do
not know the full facts; however, I am in full sympathy and empathy
with Virginia LaLonde.
The judges [ there have been several in the variety of hearings
] have not taken sufficent control of the case - other than to stand
behind administrative procedure. Virginia was jailed; Nicole was
hiding and living in fear. Stephen was living unfettered in his
own independenty way ......
Too much pain here than necessary ... and a little
lopsided.
].
|
509.8 | Judge = Contempt of family | AMUN::CRITZ | Ya know what I mean, Vern | Mon Oct 12 1987 16:40 | 10 |
| I (like everyone else) am unsure as to what exactly went
on. My first reaction was that maybe Virginia was just
trying to put the hurt on her husband. Subsequently
I've decided that she really has grounds for what she
did (she's proved that by going to jail and being
separated from Nicole). The callousness of the judges
in this case is disgusting. Nicole will suffer the
most. It's real tough when you're 8 years old.
Scott
|
509.9 | Why did the DA not press charges against Stephen? | SEMI::LEVITIN | Sam Levitin | Tue Oct 13 1987 10:57 | 24 |
| To correct a tidbit or 2:
Nicole LaLonde was found in Durham, N.C.
I believe the first discussion was with a social worker
with Nicole, who believed there had been abuse, and
turned over the matter to DSS, who also believed there
had been abuse.
Now the issue that really galls me throughout the
whole mess is, "If there are <N> parties who support
the claim that Nicole has been abused, why not charge
someone (the female LaLondes claim is was Stephen)
with child abuse or whatever charges may be appropriate
and let the issue be fought out in front of a judge (and jury)?"
WHY VICTIMIZE THE VICTIM? (Yes, I'm shouting.)
I read somewhere that the Essex (?) County DA did not
want to press charges in the case.
Sam (sorry, this whole affair has been a real "hot-button"
for me recently)
|
509.10 | News at 6:00 | AMUN::CRITZ | Ya know what I mean, Vern | Tue Oct 13 1987 12:05 | 10 |
| I heard on the news this morning that Stephen LaLonde
is supposed to have some sort of press conference or
arena whereby he will make a public statement. According
to the news, he has a tape that proves he did not
molest his daughter.
I'm interested in what this tape could contain that is
so definitely in his favor.
Scott
|
509.11 | We *ARE* A Nation of Laws | FDCV03::ROSS | | Tue Oct 13 1987 12:20 | 42 |
| There is a contributor to some of the Conferences who has, in his
personal profile field, the words (and I'm probably paraphrasing):
"The Law, Hell, Give Me *Justice*".
This statement is apropos of this case; indeed, too many cases,
where people come before the Courts expecting the "right" thing
will be done, only to find that the "right" thing too often is at
odds with the concept of: "We are a Nation of Laws, not of Men (or
of Women)".
I'm really not sure what to make of the LaLonde case. Combatants
(and that's the most descriptive word) in child custody cases
are often out for each other's blood. In many cases, the child(ren)
is a helpless pawn in an elaborate game of charges and countercharges,
made by the attorneys of the parents. At times, the child is subtly
coached by each of his/her parents (I'm not saying this is the case
here).
Then we have the contradictory testimony of so-called "expert wit-
nesses". It's sort of like taking polls. One can always find an
"expert" to testify whatever one wants.
There was a case, somewhat similar to this one, last year in New
Hampshire. The mother was asserting that both her children, a boy
and a girl, had been molested by her ex-husband, their father. She
brought in an "expert" witness, Dr. Muriel Sugarman, a psychologist
from Mass General Hospital, who had interviewed the children and
claimed that their responses were consistent with those of children
who had been sexually abused.
The father, in turn, produced his own "expert witnesses" who refuted
the testimony of Dr. Sugarman. Indeed, even the various court-appointed
attorneys, speaking on behalf of the children, contradicted each
other's claims.
What I'm trying to say is that I do not know how to balance the
concepts of: A person is innocent until proven guilty versus the
rights of "alleged" victims not to remain in situations which
continue to put them "at risk".
Alan
|
509.12 | Ick | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Oct 13 1987 13:05 | 16 |
| agreed Alan. Even I wonder if the whole thing is a sham. Is she
crazy enough to do all this for a lie? But, what if it isn't a
lie?
My instinct is to take the girl away from BOTH parents, get her
into a good home where she will be safe. But if she has been telling
the truth and unjustly loses BOTH parents, what damage will that
do? Will she ever believe a grown-up again??
If it is all a lie, I'll bet there are a lot of our male contributors
who would empathize VERY strongly with Steven LaLonde.
If charges are finally brought against him, I sincerely hope I will
not be part of that jury: won't be pretty or clear-cut.
Lee
|
509.13 | | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Tue Oct 13 1987 13:17 | 10 |
| re: .12
If it is all a lie, I'll bet there are a lot of our male contributors
who would empathize VERY strongly with Steven LaLonde.
If Mrs. LaLonde's charges are, indeed, lies, I would hope that our
female contributors would also emphathize VERY strongly with Steven
LaLonde.
Martin.
|
509.14 | doesn't EVERYBODY want justice? | ULTRA::LARU | do i understand? | Tue Oct 13 1987 13:17 | 10 |
| re .12
>> If it is all a lie, I'll bet there are a lot of our male contributors
>> who would empathize VERY strongly with Steven LaLonde.
If it's a lie, I would hope that a lot of contributors of both sexes
would empathize with Steven LaLonde.
bruce
|
509.15 | This whole case is a travesty! | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Tue Oct 13 1987 13:03 | 33 |
| The entire case is a mess, with the child being the biggest loser.
She is being used as a weapon by both parents, and is being knocked
around like a tennis ball.
The legal and social establishments have acted cruelly, and have
done nothing either to find out the truth or establish justice. If
evidence exists one way or another, it should have been brought
out.
A few asides:
After all this time, unless there was extreme physical damage that
has not completely healed, it is doubtful if a physical examination
will reveal a thing. It will just add more mental scars. (And, if
there are physical scars, they won't show who or what caused them.)
Re: .1
Children can and do lie about abuse and incest. I used to be director
of admissions at a state mental hospital, and was a psychiatric social
worker before that. I heard plenty of tales that never checked out
(and, sadly, plenty that were true). Maybe years ago children didn't
make up incest and rape stories, but now when they routinely see and
hear about them on TV and newspapers, and openly discuss them among
themselves, they can lie about them, too. In addition, when they
have been questioned about it so many times over such a long time
period, (and perhaps coaxed by the interviewer) the child may have
difficulty separating the truth from the fantasy.
I'm not saying this is true here, but the child certainly has had
good training in lying and deceit in this case.
-bs
|
509.16 | Excuse Me? | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Tue Oct 13 1987 13:39 | 17 |
| re .13, .14
Yep you're right. I goofed. Apologies all around...
re .15: children lie about "these" things
Say what? All the studies I have seen claim this is not the case.
Admittedly, I have not had extensive experience with it but still...
While I do not wish to challenge what you say (read: NOT trying
to say that your experiences are false, NO snub intended), if you
know of any studies done in the past decade or so which supports
the idea that children can be coaxed to falsely claim incest, I
would like to know of them (reprints if they are papers, titles
if they are books, etc).
Lee
|
509.17 | RElationships | FDCV10::IWANOWICZ | Deacons are Permanent | Tue Oct 13 1987 13:52 | 26 |
|
A thought .... Since it is not really possible to 'prove' via
examination that Stephen LaLonde abused his daughter;and, moreover,
it is really one party saying one thing to be refuted by the other,
perhaps it might be useful to have professional people review with
the Lalondes [ separately and together ] the circumstances under
which they decided to conceive a child [ Nicole ]. That is, was
the birth an event anticipated and planned by both? Was the
event an accident ? How was the relationship going with them
at the time?
Given some inkling in the above, perhaps there can be some better
correlation then with the more recent events... One's behavior
is usually consistent with historical antecedents - except in
highly improbable and volatile situations.... The3 complications
here are enormous.
Yet, I still think knowing more about how Virginia and Stephen
related to each other would help the couts know something about
how the parents related to Nicole... and what might have been
possible .... or not possible ..
|
509.18 | Confusion | BRUTUS::MTHOMSON | Why re-invent the wheel | Tue Oct 13 1987 14:35 | 23 |
| I feel confusion about this case. Was the abuse issue documented
prior to the custody battle. Was it the issue that tore this family
apart. I am so afraid that parents will use the sexual abuse issue
to gain custody of their children. That abuse to the child and
the system is a diffucult call. Within the past several years at
least two men I know of were found to be unjustly accused of child
abuse of their children. In each of these cases the child was coached
by the mother and lawyer to lie to the judge....what is the world
coming to. The issue of fair child custody is to diffucult to judge in
and of itself without incest accusations being hurled at mothers
or fathers.
I'm not sure what the truth is in this case. I just know that the
child is the victim, and there are no easy answers.
Incest and child sexual abuse are very diffucult issues and the
courts, and psychologists are not sufficiently trained to determine
these cases but they are all we have at the moment. I wish I had
an answer for cases of this type...sadly I don't and I am not sure
others do either.
MaggieT
|
509.19 | Truth vs. fantasy | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Tue Oct 13 1987 15:13 | 58 |
| Re: .16 - Children telling the truth
Lee, I can't cite you any studies - I'm no longer in that field
(thank the goddess), so all I can do is tell you about personal
experience. Go to a library and look things up.
Children do not always tell the truth. They have fantasy lives.
They imagine there are monsters under the bed, and that daddy
bought them an airplane.
Sex is no different than any other fantasy. The child can invent all
types of sexual fantasies involving themselves, their parents,
and others. These can be based in limited knowledge or pure
imagination.
In addition, adults can encourage children to lie. In messy
relationships one parent can use the child as a tool against
the other. In extreme cases the child can be taught or coaxed by
one parent to make sexual allegations about the other. When the
case comes to light, the prosecutor, judge, or social worker can
lead the child on to give the answer the questioner is seeking,
whether it is true or not.The child may be eager to please, or
eager to end the ordeal, or hate the other parent, and give the
answer he or she thinks the questioner wants.
If a case drags on (and most do) the child is repeatedly questioned,
and may have difficulty separating out what is real and what isn't.
Skillful, compassionate, and professional interviewing will help to reveal
the truth. The involved adults (both accuser and accused) should definitely
be interviewed. The relationship between the two, how they get on together
(or don't), what they think of each other, and what they think of the child,
are very important.
Lee, I have included 2 explicit examples where young children claimed they
were sexually assaulted. In one case, there was an actual assault; the other
case was the child's fantasy. This follows the form feed, so nobody has to
read this who doesn't want to.
-bs
CAUTION
EXPLICIT SEXUAL LANGUAGE AND EXAMPLES FOLLOW THAT MAY BE OFFENSIVE TO
SOME.
PRESS NEXT REPLY OR NEXT UNSEEN IF YOU DO NOT WISH TO CONTINUE.
A 6-year-old boy who told the social worker that "Daddy put his
finger in my bum." When this was investigated, it turned out that the child
had witnessed two teenagers about to have sex. It scared the boy, and he
ran off. The story was fantasy.
In another case, a 5-year-old girl said that "Daddy put his wee-wee in my
thing." Investigation showed that the girl had been sexual assaulted. The
father confessed and was convicted.
|
509.20 | can we be fair? | ULTRA::LARU | do i understand? | Tue Oct 13 1987 15:30 | 17 |
| re .16
The Village Voice just published an article about the prosecution
of two Texas (?) women for child abuse at a day-care center where they
worked. Investigators in the case asked leading questions of the
children and often manipulated them in order to prompt answers in
keeping with the desired results. The women are now in prison.
Are they guilty? Only they and the children know, but the article
makes it clear that the hysteria that often surrounds cases like
these makes it difficult if not impossible for defendents to get
impartial investigations or fair trials. I believe it is widely
acknowledged that abuse charges are now being thrown around rather
indiscriminately in cases involving child custody.
Unfortunately, I've no easy answers (no hard ones, either).
bruce
|
509.21 | | TSG::PHILPOT | | Tue Oct 13 1987 15:40 | 16 |
| re: all the discussion about whether the LaLonde child is lying
or not.
In last night's interview on Ch 5 news, Stephen LaLonde said that
when his daughter was questioned, she said she was NOT sexually
assaulted, and the social worker said that denial was a symptom
of abuse, so...concluded that Nicole *had* been abused.
I haven't been following the details that closely...did Nicole ever
say she was abused? If what her father said is true (the reporter
did not say to him, "We heard Nicole said she WAS abused") then
it's not a case of whether the child is lying, but the adults.
Just trying to sort out the facts...I don't know WHO to believe.
Lynne
|
509.22 | question | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Tue Oct 13 1987 17:27 | 6 |
| re .19 (i think -- bsloane's reply)
a small point:
but if the child "hates one parent", shouldn't that be taken into
consideration when deciding who gets custody?
liz
|
509.23 | answer | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Tue Oct 13 1987 17:35 | 5 |
| liz,
Of course it should!
Bruce
|
509.24 | Magazine article on coaching | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Tue Oct 13 1987 19:41 | 26 |
| There is an article in the September 1987 issue of _New Woman_ magazine
that claims that this seems to be the latest thing in mud hurling
against spouses during a divorce and child custody hearings. It
goes on to describe how children are coached and rewarded (sometimes
the parent doesn't realize he/she is rewarding the child for lieing).
An example they used was a child going from rough-housing with some
new stepbrothers, to them throwing the child accross the room, and
down the stairs. The truth was that the children were playing.
As the child told and re-told the story, he found he could get lots
of simpathy, love, and attention from the parent if would tell
outrageous things that happened during visits.
I've still not heard or read anything that says that children have
sexual fantasies, that aren't at least somewhat based in truth.
Normally, children don't know anything about sex. Also, in the
case in question, if medical examinations are finding some sort
of damage that was caused by molestation, the damage certainly wasn't
made up.
Quite frankly, in these cases of both parents lieing about the other
to prove unfit parenthood, perhaps both parents should be believe,
and the children taken from *both* parents.
Elizabeth
|
509.25 | Child Abuse | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Tue Oct 13 1987 20:23 | 12 |
| As for whether children can lie about sexual abuse, it depends on
the age of the child and the coaching s/he received.
A young child cannot make up details about sexual abuse. They can,
however, be taught what to say, or can be asked yes/no questions
which tells them what to say.
A good examiner who uses anatomically correct dolls should be able
to quite easily tell whether a young child has been abused or not,
providing that the child has not been coached.
Carol
|
509.26 | there are liers and damm liers (sp) | IMAGIN::KOLBE | It ain't over till it's over | Tue Oct 13 1987 20:55 | 11 |
|
It seems to me that the play 'The Crucible' could be updated
for todays audience by changing the charge of wicthery to sexual
abuse. It told of the Salem witch trials where several hysterical
girls begin accussing half the town of practcing witchcraft.
I believe children can lie and will. I also believe some parents
abuse their kids. What I can't believe is our judicical system
finding out the truth in this case. Could this be the new standard
for child custody cases? How long can a person tell a lie before
even they believe it? liesl
|
509.27 | | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Oct 14 1987 10:48 | 16 |
| re .22:
> but if the child "hates one parent", shouldn't that be taken into
> consideration when deciding who gets custody?
Of course it should be taken into consideration, but isn't it also
true that a child may grow to "hate" the absent parent for no other
reason than because she/he is away, i.e. because the child feels
that the parent has abandoned him/her? All I'm saying is that it
must be discovered WHY the child hates one parent.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
509.28 | opinion only | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Wed Oct 14 1987 12:03 | 18 |
| What follows is my own opinion-gut level.
After watching both the people on TV I got a feeling that the
woman was telling the truth and idi what she had to do to protect
her child even though it meant great sacrifice to her(both in
terms of being in jail and being away from her child).
After hearing the other side-I got the distinct feeling that he
was lying. Remarks made by him such as "I don't know where that
woman is coming from -don't know what's in her mind" gave me the
feeling of verbal abuse that is quite often backed by physical
abuse.
Remember-my opinion gut level only.
I want to see the facts in this case but wonder if we ever will.
|
509.29 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Don't read this. | Wed Oct 14 1987 12:25 | 15 |
| re .26:
I thought that the "young girls" who accused people of witchcraft back
in the 1600s, Salem, Ma. were actually in their teens (14? 15?
I'm not sure). That's very different from a 5 or 6 year old that
claims sexual abuse. From everything I've heard, children just
*don't* "make it up". *However*, parents coaching their children
on the right terms adds a terrible problem into the whole mess,
and I can't see how you can tell who's telling the truth and who's
lieing unless you bring in unbiased psychologists (*not* hired by
either of the parents' lawyers), and even then you'd have to bring
in several and get a consensus. Just an idea - court-appointed
psychologists.
-Ellen
|
509.30 | rathole | ULTRA::LARU | do i understand? | Wed Oct 14 1987 13:49 | 6 |
| re .29
Great idea, but how do we find enough "unbiased" psychologists?
How do we define "unbiased." And, all psychologists never agree
on anything... so do we want a simple majority? 2/3?, or if we're
in a court of law, 12 out of 12 (or 6 out of six)???
|
509.31 | Children don't lie, but adults can re-interpret their truth | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Wed Oct 14 1987 13:31 | 67 |
| In _Glamour_ magazine about six months ago was a disturbing article
about a woman who worked at a day-care center who was dismissed,
then prosecuted for child abuse.
One of the little girls in the day-care center was weepy and fearful
and when questioned about it she tearfully said "Jackie touched
me." The day-care center worker's nickname was Jackie and she was
immediately dismissed, written up in the worst possible terms in
all the newspapers, and as a result got death threats over the phone,
obscene invasions of her privacy, etc. When the case was brought
to court, with some experts experienced in examining children
disproved the idea that this woman had been the one to abuse the
child. The newspapers, who had had a headline field day with the
case while it was in its "accusatory" stage printed the news of
Jackie's acquittal in a few-line item on a back page.
Now the interesting thing was that this woman (whose reputation
and life may be permanently ruined, at least as long as she lives
in that town) did not think that the little girl was lying. In
fact, she was concerned that something indeed _had_ happened, and
that the questioners were not being careful enough to find the true
culprit. She was shocked that upon the simple statement "Jackie
touched me" they never asked "Who's Jackie?" They simply assumed
it was her and threw her to the wolves, so to speak, without even
bothering to examine the other people who the girl was with on a
daily basis. The woman knew of a somewhat older boy at the center,
also called Jackie, who she had had to watch because of his tendency
to bully and abuse the younger children. But when she suggested
this possibility to the center's management, it only convinced them
that she was the true abuser ("What?! How dare you say that this
innocent little boy would do such a thing, you lying slut!" the
"you deny it, therefore you're guilty" school of inquisitional
reasoning).
So no, I do not think children lie. But the interpretations
that _adults_ place on the truth that children tell--that's a horse
of a completely different color. And if a powerful adult seizes
on the meaning (s)he thinks (s)he hears in a child's words and pounds
that meaning into the child's head, that child is going to come
to believe it after awhile, if only to get adults to stop their
pounding.
I mean, something like this happened to me! I'd been trying
to play with the next-door neighbor's cat, who was an irascible
old tom, and I got scratched. When my mom saw my face, she threw
a nutty; I was rushed to the doctor's for an immediate tetanus
shot, which hurt like a b****. And on top of the pain (of the shot;
the scratch I hardly noticed) I remember my mother pounding me with
questions about the encounter with the cat: "Did it attack you??
What happened?? _TELL ME!_" That kind of emotional intensity was
terrifying to 4-year-old me and rendered me completely incapable
of giving any coherent answer. I suspect that mom decided that
my terrified incoherence was due to fear of the dreaded cat. I
don't know what she told the Godfreys, but I never saw the cat again.
Did they have it destroyed? I don't know. All I know was that
I was ready to do anything to get my mother to stop coming at me
like a hurricane. She's intense and passionate, my mom, and she
was truly frightened for me. But passion is a very adult emotion,
and a child (at least yours truly when she was one) can easily
interpret passionate concern as rage. It looks the same, sounds
the same, feels the same. A thing to be avoided at all costs.
I share everyone's concern about this case; what is desperately
needed is the truth, but I sadly feel that we won't find it out
now.
Marcia
|
509.32 | Victims | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:06 | 24 |
| After publishing a number of articles sympathetic to Virginia LaLonde,
the Globe has published several telling Steven LaLonde's side of the
story. (It may be recalled that Steven had been abiding by the terms
of the court's "gag order" while his wife and her lawyer had been
openly defying it.)
According to him, he was accused of abusing his daughter during his
visits. One of them he had videotaped, another was with a guardian
who, according to Steven LaLonde, never left him alone with his child.
There are many victims in this case. In addition to the child and
both her parents, I would add the judge who must decide who, if anyone,
is telling the truth and, even harder, what is right for the child.
Furthermore, I would add to the list of victims any child who has been
abused -- and is now doubly fearful of what might happen if the facts
become known -- and any adult accused of abuse.
Martin.
PS: there is another literary reference that might be interesting:
the play Rashoman that tells the story of a rape from seven different
viewpoints.
|
509.33 | If only we knew the whole truth | FILM::LIFLAND | morDECai ben_zeef | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:26 | 72 |
| RE:.28
We too, my wife and I, when listing to just T.V. news several
months ago got the impression that Steve LaLonde might be guilty. In the
past several weeks there has been a lot of 'factual' articles written
in the Boston Globe, Newsweek, etc. While I Steve LaLonde might be still be
guilty, I find it very difficult to believe in Virginia story. Below is a
listing of the facts that I can remember from the various articles I have
read. This list is open to any additions, corrections or comments, (I don't
claim to have all the answers).
1. This is the second marriage and custody battle that Virginia has
been involved in. In her first marriage she had two sons. She was given
custody of only the older one. The court felt that because she had to
work that the father's mother could better take care of the younger son.
2. Virginia has brought her case before six judges (including the
current one. Two of those judges were women.
3. About a month after Steve was given "partial" custody Viginia
went to child services claiming that Nicole was abused by her father.
Child services investigated the charges only by interviewing the mother
and child. The case was not brought any further because the department
supervisor dropped the case. After losing a second custody round in court
she went to a child protection group which then went back to the state
and got the department to ask the district attorney to press charges. I am
not sure if there was an investigate at this point but the DA "found no
evidence to file charges".
4. At this point Viginia, in another court appearance, brought the
subject before a judge for the first time. In all her other court appearances
the seems to be no mention of child abuse ( I might be wrong at this point).
This judge, a female and one with experience in child abuse cases, appointed
a psychologist to question Steve LaLonde and Nicole. I believe one Globe
article also stated that the judge ordered a physical exam for Nicole but I
can't state that as fact. After finding that "there was no evidence" the
judge stated that the right to "full visitation" and could take her on a
three week vacation. Viginia appealed the decision through two appeals
courts and lost each time. It was at this time she left with the child.
5. When she was brought before the current judge she was asked to produce
evidence as to the charge of child abuse, she refused. only then did the judge
asked her to produce Nicole. Again she refused. He continued the case for
several weeks to allow Viginia to consult with her attorneys. When she returned
to court the judge offered to have the child placed in a neutral site. She
refused. The judge offered to have her placed in Children's Hospital and
examined before either parents could have unsupervised visitation rights. Again
she refused. The judge had little chose but to take custody away from Viginia.
6. During the time she was in jail the judge informed her that she had
the right to appeal his contempt charge and another judge could let her out
on bail. Again, according to the Globe, she refused.
7. While Nicole was out of state she was examined by a doctor connected to
a child protection group and, several years after the fact, was found some
physical damage. While the doctor made the medical condition known to the
news media, as near as I can tell he has not made any records or himself
available to the court. Had the doctor done so Viginia would have legal
grounds to be let out on bail, while the subject of child abuse "HAD TO
BE REVIEW" being that it was the only prime evidence rejected in the contempt
charge.
While there are too many cases of child abuse that go unpunished,
at what point should a person be accused in the media without evidence. If
there is ""any"" evidence then Steve LaLonde should be charged. But if
Viginia is just using the media and the courts just so that she doesn't
lose another child to an ex-husband, it will be Viginia that has abused
the child by taking away part of her childhood.
FINAL COMMENT:
Child abuse is a terrible thing done by both sexes, not just one.
|
509.34 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Wed Oct 14 1987 19:15 | 38 |
| I think it's naive to assume that children don't lie about sexual
abuse.
I think that happy, well-adjusted children from stable homes are
unlikely to lie about sexual abuse.
But children who are forced to use their wits to survive become
emotional "street kids". Children from alcoholic homes relate stories
of learning to lie very young and not even knowing that they were
lying because it was safer to lie than tell the truth.
Children like attention, and will probably lie to get it in proportion
to how desperately they crave and need it. Some children who have
not been abused per se have been treated meanly by some adults in
their lives--sometimes it's a fine line. How tempting it would
be to "get back" at the adults involved. Remember Lillian Hellman's
play "The Children's Hour"? Mary, the child in that play, accuses
her two teachers of lesbianism, and essentially ruins their source
of livelihood and their lives. She is believed because "she couldn't
have possibly made it up otherwise".
Children can read many of the details in popular magazines and hear
endless descriptions of sexual abuse on TV. It's becoming part
of the culture, unfortunately. For a disturbed child, it is the
ultimate "trump card" he or she could play against an adult with
whom the child has a poor relationship. Children often feel that
they have little real power in a world full of powerful adults.
In some cases they are incapable of understanding the impact that
such an accusation could have on people's lives.
At the same time, I believe that most children who have made public
claims about sexual abuse have not been lying. I sometimes wonder
if people will shy away from teaching and daycare for fear of potential
undeserved lawsuits?
Holly
|
509.35 | The Children's Hour is *fiction* | ULTRA::GUGEL | Don't read this. | Wed Oct 14 1987 19:27 | 7 |
| re .34:
Your note was very thoughtfully written, Holly, but I have one
small problem - "The Children's Hour" was *fiction*. You can't
use it to defend the claim that children make these things up.
-Ellen
|
509.36 | Evidence | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Wed Oct 14 1987 20:11 | 6 |
| People who counsel abused children generally have a pretty good feeling
about what is true and what isn't. Also, some physical evidence, such
as dilation or scarring of the vaginal or anal openings offers fairly
clear evidence of some forms of prior abuse. (Of course, there are
many forms of child abuse that don't leave physical marks on the kid.)
|
509.37 | Fiction Does Not Equal Untruth | FDCV03::ROSS | | Thu Oct 15 1987 08:32 | 12 |
| RE: .35
There is a line that goes something like "Art imitates life".
When someone writes a work of fiction, she/he draws upon emotions,
actions, situations that we humans all can relate to in our own lives.
Just because something is "fiction" doesn't mean it can't, and doesn't,
occur in "real life".
Alan
|
509.38 | Hold on a minute | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | | Thu Oct 15 1987 12:15 | 24 |
|
I think we need to keep in mind that the number of children who
might make up stories of sexual abuse (for whatever reason) is tiny
in comparison to the number of children who are abused and never
tell or who are not believed. Might a child lie? I suppose, in
some rare circumstances, but I doubt that any child could tell a
lie that would hold up to investigation by a trained professional.
A child can't lie *in detail* about something he or she doesn't
understand. If an adult coached a child to say that sexual abuse
had occurred, I'll bet it's pretty likely that a lot of details
would be missing or inaccurate. If judges hearing cases involoving
sexual abuse of children were trained in the area of child psych.
(or if judges listened to the recommendations of professionals
trained in that area), I suspect that more children would be safe
from repeated assaults, and that adults would be accused unfairly.
I think that to spend so much of our time speculating about children
lying about abuse is a real disservice to the countless children
who are being abused but are silent because they fear they'll not
be believed. I think we can do a better job of protecting the rights
of the accused without risking the safety and emotional well-being
of children.
Justine
|
509.39 | Again, decision is correct, the move is questionable | PATSPK::SEGUIN | | Thu Oct 15 1987 12:42 | 8 |
| I'd like to encourge the readers of this notes to read note 60 to
see an example of how family problems do affect others.
I agree with .38, I too doubt that any child could sustain a lie
with such strong convictions under the scruity of trained
professionals.
|
509.40 | good feelings are NOT evidence | ULTRA::LARU | do i understand? | Thu Oct 15 1987 14:44 | 14 |
| re .36
>> People who counsel abused children generally have a pretty good feeling
>> about what is true and what isn't. Also, some physical evidence, such
I would hate for me (or even you, for that matter) to be convicted
of anything based on someone's "pretty good feeling." I believe
that "guilty beyond a reasonable doubt" is our current standard.
Please search out the Village Voice article for a nightmare of
injustice based on good feelings and a desire to convict, rather
than discover the truth.
bruce
|
509.41 | | HARDY::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Thu Oct 15 1987 19:13 | 48 |
| Your point is well taken, Ellen. I used the example because I knew it
was familiar to many people, and I knew that I could use it without
betraying anyone's confidentiality. A similar situation
occured in a girls' school in the midwest when I was in college,
and it always made the story seem even larger than life for me.
I agree that people shouldn't use fiction to support an argument
without at least saying that that is what they are doing.
I'm a former teacher and a very strong advocate of children's rights.
I've been involved in presentations in the schools about child sexual
abuse. (I was one of the ones who was abused as a kid, too.) I hear
that some people writing here are upset that we bother discussing the
thought that children are sometimes capable of lying about these
things.
I don't agree. My work with kids has made me feel very strongly
that the kindest and most loving approach to them is a realistic
one. I don't think that parents, teachers, and other adults should
ever discount a child's story about being touched or hurt without
listening carefully and getting professional help if it's needed.
At the same time I'm surprised when adults believe that it's *impossible*
for a child to lie about abuse, or embroider upon an innocent incident.
It's not impossible even though it is a very small percentage of
children who can lie convincingly over a period of time.
There are lots of factors for skilled professionals to look at,
and I'm grateful that they are capable of doing that work day after
day. I think in most cases they can sort out truth from untruth.
There are some parallels with the issue of rape. Very few women
lie about it, but a few do. I'd rather see any woman who says she has
been raped get all the care and support she can use without anyone
trying to sort out her story at that point. At the same time, before
a man's life is ruined, I would like to think that the legal system is
going to do its best to sort out what happened.
I don't think that it is unsupportive of our sisters and of the
children in our society to try to look calmly at all possibilities
when something we find appalling is said to have occurred. In the
long run I think it is the only way we can keep a pendulum effect
from occurring where something like sexual abuse is a big issue,
and the next thing you know society is practically immune to charges
of it because it has been used unfairly while it had "sacred" status.
But maybe I'm alone in believing that.
Holly
|
509.42 | | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Oct 15 1987 19:37 | 2 |
| Well spoken Holly, and no you are not alone in your opinions.
Bonnie
|
509.43 | re .41 Yeah, Holly! | CIPHER::VERGE | | Fri Oct 16 1987 11:39 | 12 |
| re. .41
Holly, you are not alone. What you said is well-spoken and expresses
my viewpoints as well. I have been in the position of knowing others
who have been sexually abused, and also of knowing others who were
accused of sexually abusing their children. In the first case,
it DID happen, and the affects of the abuse are disastrous. In
the second, nothing was ever proved, and again the results are
disaterous(sp?). We must give *some* credit to the experts and
hope we can all keep the *system* working to sort out the facts
from the fiction and take the appropriate action.
|
509.44 | question of emphasis placed on the exceptions | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | | Fri Oct 16 1987 11:59 | 20 |
|
I wouldn't want anyone to go to jail unless it were absolutely certain
that abuse had occurred. But when we talk about child sexual abuse
cases being heard by judges, we're almost always talking about custody
decisions not criminal charges. Very few people go to jail for
assaulting their children (or any member of their family) even if
the judge decides to deny visitation rights to the offending parent.
It would be awful for a parent to be unjustly accused and then lose
visitation rights, but I think I'd rather see a parent have supervised
visits with the child while the facts got sorted out than have a
child living in fear that he or she is going to be assaulted again.
I don't disagree with much of what's been said here, but I worry
about the emphasis placed on lying children. I feel like the issue
of children who lie (and are believed!) about assault should appear
as a tiny footnote in one chapter of a multi-volumed book on child
sexual assault, and the notes here seem to be giving it much higher
billing than that.
Justine
|
509.45 | I think I agree with Holly! | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Truth is Beauty, Beauty is Truth | Fri Oct 16 1987 16:10 | 16 |
|
A child lying about sexual abuse is in the same catagory as a
woman lying about rape - as far as I am concerned. Some do lie
but most don't even report it - in my opinion. So there has to
be a reason for them to say it - whether it is truth or fiction.
That reason should be determined if they did lie.
I have a bias in favor of the woman or child and feel that they
should recieve support but I don't think that someone should go
to jail because of a lie.
_peggy
(-)
| Goddess I think I am confused again
|
509.46 | Lying is small percentage | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Fri Oct 16 1987 16:35 | 10 |
| I agree with Justine. My mother knew about my abuse by my father,
and did nothing. I lived in fear for the next 6 years of living
with him. Let's sort out the truth, but let's understand that the
percentage of children lying about this compared to the percentage
of children telling the truth is insignificant. By giving the child
the benefit of any doubt at first, and protecting that child, and
THEN looking into the facts, we will do our children (and future
adults) a world of good, without any harm to any innocent person
who may be accused.
Carol
|
509.47 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | I am not a free number, I am a telephone box | Sun Oct 18 1987 19:21 | 26 |
| A couple of weeks ago, my gardening gloves disappeared, and
for reasons not relevant here I was fairly sure that my younger
daughter (8) had taken them and hidden them.
So I asked her where they were - interrogated her for several
minutes - and was almost convinced she had nothing to do with their
disappearance. No. She had no idea where they were. She had not
taken them, and she had never seen them.
So I went and did some washing up.
And at the other side of the kitchen she interrogated the cat,
just the same way as I had interrogated her, but slightly more
skillfuly, since she was able to establish that the cat had *not*
seen my gardening gloves going to a certain place under some bushes
at the end of the garden either!
After that it was easy to retrieve them. I think she had decided
it was time to allow me to have them back.
I do not think she would lie about sexual abuse, but I know
she could lie convincingly about anything she was really interested
in.
But then maybe I am just not as good a questioner as some of
these skilled social workers.
|
509.48 | Lying about non-experiences | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Mon Oct 19 1987 12:59 | 14 |
| I don't think that anyone is saying that children cannot lie.
However, it is much easier for a child to say "no, I don't know
about that" than to give details on something they are supposed
to have experienced. If your daughter was trying to convince you
that she HAD taken the gloves, and had hidden them under a bush
in your garden, and she had never seen gloves or a garden before
in her life, then she would have a hard time trying to convince
you, since she would not easily be able to describe what a glove
looked like, or what your garden looked like, or the type of plant
she hid them under. If she could not even tell you accurately these
things, I'm sure you would wonder why she had said that she had
hidden them in the first place.
Carol
|
509.49 | Ask first then decide | NISYSG::SEGUIN | | Wed Oct 21 1987 12:20 | 10 |
| re. 47. The latter assumption is probably more correct. Social
workers, doctors, psychiatrists, and so forth are skilled questioners.
Unfortunately, when the courts pit one skilled questioner against
another skilled questioner we the people are at their mercy.
re .47 well put.
We all need learn to ask for a definition or description first before
making generalizations, interrogations, conclusions, assumptions.....
|
509.50 | do social workers replace a jury? | VISA::MONAHAN | I am not a free number, I am a telephone box | Sun Nov 01 1987 23:18 | 25 |
| I may be underestimating social workers, but I suspect you may
be underestimating children.
My daughter would not be likely to lie about sexual abuse, since
it is a subject of no interest for her, but she knows how adults
make love, its connection with babies, and that they like it. If
she chose to tell a story about it, it would be technically accurate.
She would probably not convince the first social worker, since
I do not think it would occur to her to add elements of fear,
embarrasment and pain to her story.
But she would learn more from the first social worker's questions
and reactions to her answers than he would from her, and by the
third social worker she would have it right.
The fact that the child tells such a story is incontrovertible
evidence that she dislikes her father. The dislike may have been
caused by real sexual abuse, and the significant chance that this
is so indicates that the courts should not insist that he be left
unsupervised with her.
On the other hand, I believe that an intelligent child with some
motivation, and who might have been coached by her mother who certainly
has some motivation, could deceive a social worker about the facts.
|
509.51 | re: .50 | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Mon Nov 02 1987 12:46 | 3 |
| How old is your daughter?
Carol
|
509.52 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | I am not a free number, I am a telephone box | Tue Nov 03 1987 06:35 | 2 |
| The one I have been writing about is just 8. I also have a 14
year old daughter (and a son who is nearly 18).
|
509.53 | Result of the evaluation of Nicole LaLonde | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:45 | 34 |
| The Boston Globe reported today that the Cambridge Hospital team that
evaluated Nicole LaLonde found that she had "genital scars 'consistent
with sexual abuse or trauma' and should be 'returned to the physical
custody of her mother, Virginia LaLonde.'"
Also, from the front page article,
"Stephen LaLonde denies that he sexually abused the child, and the report
... made no explicit finding of whether he abused his daughter or not.
"Instead, the team reported that the physical evidence and the child's
story are consistent with sexual abuse and that 'there is no evidence'
Nicole was abused by anyone other than her father.
"Psychologist John Baker wrote in the report that Stephen LaLonde's
relationship with Nicole 'is a highly romanticized and erotic relationship.
The physical intimacy he described, although not illegal, is not
conductive to healthy development in a child. Mr LaLonde's inability
to perceive these behaviors beyond the average is of great concern.'"
The hospital team recommended that DSS keep custody of Nicole while
they help the parents, "who were divorded in 1983, 'solve co-parenting
issues on their own.'"
"... [Psychiatrist Elizabeth] Liao concluded that 'There was no
indication that [Virginia LaLonde] instigated her daughter to
produce' the allegations. "Mrs. LaLonde seeks no revenge and
wants to have Nicole to have contact with her father, but only
after he acknowledges the alleged abuse and gets help.'"
Martin.
"quotes from the article"
'quotes by the Globe from the report.'
|
509.54 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:52 | 9 |
| Thanks, Martin. I heard a condensed summary on the news on my way
in and was hoping that someone (I thought of you particularly ;-)
would put in the update.
Poor Nicole, how rotten all of this must have been for her. One
wonders what the future holds for her; some scars can never be wholly
obliterated. I'm bloody glad her mum is strong and sensible.
=maggie
|
509.55 | TV crews and ??? at Logan yesterday | GLINKA::GREENE | | Thu Dec 31 1987 09:21 | 12 |
| Help please: I don't watch TV! [I plan to continue not watching
TV -- what I want help with follows ;-) ]
Yesterday afternoon, circa 3:15 - 3:30, there was a press conference
at the Eastern Terminal at Logan. TV camera crews, reporters
scribbling with pens and little pads. It was clearly about the
Lalonde case. Was that Mr. Lalonde and his lawyer?
Whoever it was...WHAT DID THEY SAY?
Many thanks,
Penelope
|
509.56 | [No] film at 11 | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Thu Dec 31 1987 09:54 | 18 |
| I watched all three Boston 11pm newscasts looking for reaction to
the LaLonde case. However, with the new fad of multiple homicides
(two in Southern NewHampshire), an MBTA crash, and other random
stuff, the LaLonde case was pushed aside. There was a brief
comment from a psychiatrist (consultant to Mrs. LaLonde) and a three
second denial by Mr. LaLonde that I thought was a teaser, but turned
out to be the "balancing" viewpoint to the psychiatrist.
This morning's Globe moved the story to the front page of the Metro
section, without shedding any new light. Mrs. LaLonde's consultant,
Dr. Muriel Sugarman, condemned the visitation recommendations of
the Cambridge Hospital team.
The Globe summarized that the report found "evidence consistent with
sexual abuse or trauma and noted that Nicole consistently accused
her father of abusing her."
Martin.
|
509.57 | custody and abuse claims | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Sun Jan 24 1988 15:15 | 42 |
| Here's a related tangent, typed in without permission...
........................................................
"Study: Abuse claims in custody cases mostly true"
John H. Kennedy
Boston Globe, Friday 22 Jan 1988
"A public perception that women often fabricate charges of sexual
abuse against their former partners in child custody cases is
contradicted by a recent study, a pediatrician and assistant professor
at Harvard Medical School said yesterday.
"Dr. Jan E. Paradise, a staff pediatrician in the child protection
program an Children's Hospital in Boston, discussed research she
performed in 1985-86 in Philadelphia to a panel of the Gender Bias
Study, which conducted its second public hearing to consider testimony
about gender bias in the judicial system.
"Paradise said the perception persists that women frequently
invent child abuse charges to gain an advantage in custody cases.
'If you look at real cases in real life, it doesn't bar that out,'
she said after her testimony. In her research, she reviewed 162
cases involving sexual abuse at The Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia, in addition to some cases from her own practice.
"She found 31 cases in which sexual abuse was alleged against
a parent, usually by the mother. From those she compared the frequency
in which the allegations were substantiated in the 12 cases that
also involved a custody dispute against the 19 in which custody
was not an issue.
"Her research, she said, revealed that abuse was substantiated
in two-thirds of those that had custody disputes, and in 95 percent
of those that did not. Based on the number of cases examined,
statistically, the figures reflect 'no clear-cut, true differences'
between the two groups of cases.
"The Gender Bias Study was commissioned by the state Supreme
Judicial Court to determine whether gender bias exists in the system
and, if so, make recommendations to remedy it. The third public
hearing is scheduled for March 23 in Worcester."
|
509.58 | statistically insignificant | YODA::BARANSKI | Im here for an argument, not Abuse! | Thu Jan 28 1988 13:00 | 16 |
| RE: .57
""Her research, she said, revealed that abuse was substantiated in two-thirds of
those that had custody disputes, and in 95 percent of those that did not. Based
on the number of cases examined, statistically, the figures reflect 'no
clear-cut, true differences' between the two groups of cases."
If the difference between 66% and 95% is not statistically significant, then the
entire study is insignificant.
A second problem is that "the allegations were substantiated", if it is easy to
falsely accuse abuse, might it also be easy to falsely 'substantiate
allegations'?
Jim.
|