Last week Dr. Liane Leedom wrote about the tragic case Dr. Amy Castillo, whose children were murdered by their psychopathic father after several judges issued rulings that failed to protect them. I hope this terrible and extreme case will be a wake-up call for family courts.
Lovefraud frequently receives e-mail from men and women involved in child custody disputes with sociopaths, who hopefully, are not murderers. Here is one of them:
I am involved in a custody case with a sociopath, however, my case is being fought in Europe where I recently relocated to (I am American, he is European). After being the sole caregiver of my children for five years, I had no choice but to leave them with their father and return to the States. When we separated he took their passports and left the country for a year. It was NOT possible to obtain new passports for children without BOTH parents’ signatures.
By the end of that year my financial situation was desperate and I had no choice. I came back to the States, got myself back on my feet and recently I started my own company as a Virtual Assistant, allowing me to work anywhere in the world. While in the States I came back to Europe every six to eight weeks to visit my children. Well one month ago, I relocated back to Europe to live and continue my fight for custody of my children.
The court case had already been ongoing since January and in typical sociopath style he has lied and forged documents. Even so, my ex was recently given sole custody (temporarily while custody is decided) and that I must pay him 900 euros (around $1,300 USD a month!). As if that could not be bad enough, he sends me on a regular basis (the most recent being today) faxes full of lies and accusations that he then turns around and uses as evidence in his court case!!! Furthermore, I do NOT have 900 euros a month to give him. I just relocated and started my own business and this is a real slap in the face with all of the financial damage he has done to me as well as my credit in the U.S.
I have fired my attorneys and hired the best Custody/Family attorney where I live. He has been in practice for 30 years and not lost a case! Also he is known to be a very strong and tough attorney. I wish I would have had him in the beginning. So with this I feel confidence.
The reason I am writing is because although I have a very positive outlook and feel that I am a strong person, as I know that most of you can agree, it is very difficult dealing with a sociopath. When I receive these horrible faxes my stomach just drops and it can make me feel very anxious for hours after. So now I have stopped reading them at all. I do not know what I am looking for by sending this email. I think I just need the support of knowing there are others out there going through the same things as me and that this is manageable and that I will make it through. I would greatly appreciate hearing what others have done in a situation like this. Thank you.
Like most parents fighting a custody battle with a sociopath, this woman faces a difficult times. Below are some general suggestions about child custody and sociopaths.
Get him or her to walk away
If your ex is a sociopath, at best, he or she will be a lousy parent. At worst, he or she will intentionally try to damage your children. Therefore, if at all possible, it may be best to cut the sociopath out of your children’s lives.
You may want to consider offering the sociopath an incentive to walk away. Tell the sociopath to give up parental rights, and he or she won’t have to pay any child support. You may feel that you need the child support payments, but chances are that you’ll never get the money, or it will always be a struggle to get it. The money isn’t worth having the predator in your family’s life. Figure out a way to support your children without it.
Sometimes this works—there are sociopaths who care more about money than kids. But many times it doesn’t, because the sociopath considers children to be possessions. Or, the sociopath just wants to win the battle with you, and destroy you in the process. In those cases, you’ll end up in court.
Tactics in custody battles
I am forever grateful that I never had children with my sociopathic ex-husband. I avoided the most tragic of circumstances involving these predators—a child custody battle. Therefore, the suggestions I make below come from my research and what Lovefraud readers have told me.
If you’re fighting a custody battle with a sociopath, here are some tactics to follow:
1. Document, document, document.
Keep a journal of everything that happens. Often, the craziness is so intense that you don’t want to remember what happens. Your journal will be important when you need to tell a cohesive story of what has been going on with the sociopath, especially if you need to tell it long after events have transpired. Save every scrap of paper, every e-mail, every fax, every receipt. Develop a way of organizing the information, whether chronological, or by topic. Keep copies in a safe place.
2. Have witnesses
It is best not to deal with the sociopath alone; every interaction then becomes he said/she said. Have a trusted friend or relative present during child exchanges or other interactions as much as you can. You may even want to consider tape recording and videotaping some of what goes on.
3. Get your own information
Do not allow the sociopathic parent to control information about your children. Make sure you get information directly from schools, doctors and others.
4. Hire an aggressive, competent attorney
Child custody cases with sociopaths are not normal cases. The sociopath will not play by the rules. Your attorney must understand this. The sociopath will lie in court, although his or her performance will appear heartfelt, like he or she is “just concerned with the welfare of the children.” The sociopath will make outrageous accusations. The sociopath is also likely to retain an attorney who is also sociopathic. Therefore, your attorney must be up for the challenge.
5. Do not allow lies to become part of the court record
Sociopaths lie. Sociopaths lie convincingly. You cannot allow unchallenged lies to become part of the court records. Once they are, they take on the aura of truth, and put you in a very bad position. Some lies, like accusations of child abuse, may haunt you forever.
6. Be cautious in stating that your ex is, in fact, a sociopath
Unfortunately, many judges really do not understand what this means to the welfare of a child. Like the general public, many judges equate “sociopath” with “serial killer,” and may consequently believe that you are overreacting. So it may not be in your best interest to prove that he or she is a sociopath. Focus on proving the behavior.
7. Stay calm in court
You must present a calm, professional image when you go to court, even as the sociopath lies. Do not allow the sociopath to make you emotional. The sociopath will accuse you of being unstable, and you will prove it by your behavior in court. Keep your emotions in check, at least in front of the judge.
8. Make sure court orders are explicit
Insist on detailed court orders. The order should not say, “parent has visitation every other weekend.” It should specify exactly which weekends, starting at what times, returning at what times, who is responsible for transporting children, who is responsible for bathing and feeding them—everything must be spelled out in detail. If there is any ambiguity, the sociopath will exploit it.
9. Make the sociopath abide by court orders
If the sociopath fails to honor the orders, do not cut him or her any slack. Record any violation. Call the police if necessary. Continue to document everything that happens, because you may need to go to court again. If you ever decide that you need to cut the sociopath out of the child’s life, you’ll need evidence to do it.
10. Take care of yourself
You will need all your resources to deal with the sociopath. Therefore, make healthy decisions in your own life. Eat right, avoid drugs and alcohol, get enough sleep, exercise and develop a support network. In order to care for your children, you must care for yourself.
Post your suggestions
I previously reviewed the book, Win Your Child Custody War, on the Lovefraud Blog. This book is full of information that may help you, from how to gather documentation to how to hire an attorney and private investigator.
If Lovefraud readers have any more suggestions that may be helpful to others involved in custody battles with sociopaths, please post it in comments below.
Dear Tiredofgames,
I am glad you are here! Good on you for leaving and call the police on him! Whoot whoot!!! Way to take control!!!!
Now you have to take his power away by empowering yourself! A lot of people here are NC (no contact) I haven’t managed that but I am maintaining a healthy distance from spath/N. I keep the door locked at all times. Keep him away from home whenever possible. Do not let him in at any cost (letting him in with his history is a bigger CPS problem than paying heed to his threats). Take the power out of him. The next time I am threatened by mine for money, custody, my integrity, you name it–I imagine myself telling him to “BRING IT ON” with a silent powerful stare that means “mess with me and you will be in for the fight of your life!” They are empty, can’t do what they say–in my experience, but they keep us scared into believing them. Be FEARLESS!
I am so sorry to read he is in such close proximity—exactly what mine has threatened to do. Read the information here. There are so many insightful people willing to share their knowledge of what works with this personality.
As for your son, advocate for support through his school program. It sounds like he has been identified and should have an Individualized Education Plan. He should get counseling through school. He should have adult support to support academic success. Get involved with his program, make alliances with his teacher (special and general education), be frank with them about your concerns and your child’s experience with his father. You will have to advocate for your child if that is not happening from within the school system and even then you will have to reeducate teachers about your child each year. go to wrightslaw.com if you need information on special education law.
Keep checking in here–the support can make a real change in your life.
Peace, fearless!
Thank you so much, it is so comforting to know that I am not alone. I have struggled with this for the 12 years of marrage and the 4 years since the divorce, and for the first time in 16 years I feel like there is hope…
This week has been the hardest for me because he called CPS for something I didnt do. I have been so frustradded over the fact however iIhave been as you stated (Taking the power from Him) I decided that if he wants to call CPS on me and thinks he can be a better parent to our problematic child that he should be. I told him that he needed to keep our son until the issue was resolved with cps. This of course backfired on him. CPS did not think the issue was threatning and took their time investigating. In the mean time he was stuck dealing with our child which he cant handle. During the week that it took CPS to do their investigation he sent our son back home to me at least 6 times a day. Text me dirty messages for hours each day and almost split up with his new wife, however, I stood my ground and told him that he needed to care for him until the matter was resolved. Each time he sent our son back to me I walked him right back to him and at one piont had to keep the door to the house locked. I feel so guilty for having to put my son through this but my tough love has paid off somewhat. CPS had determined that everything is fine and my son, now home with me is showing slight changes in his behavior.
tiredofgames, I just wanted to say hi and welcome to LF. I can’t stand the fact that he moved in across the street from you, I’d say “unbelievable”… but it’s very believable! I wish I could offer advice to the questions you asked, but I have not been in the same situation so I’m not sure what to say except I think there are a lot of people and articles here that can help you and good for you for turning him in to the authorities AND for calling his bluff when he called CPS!!! You rock!!
That is exactly how I felt about him moving in so close… However I have to express my thanks to the responses that I have had so far here on the website. It is so comforting to know that there are poeple out there that understand what I am going through. I discussed with my now 21 year old son how we need to support and help his younger brother and he said he wanted to do anything he could to help but… Quote (everytime we try to help him it is nulified by his father) Which is so true and typical of the S with N not only do they deny that there is a problem with their self but there is no way that their offspring could have a problem, because if there was a problem with their child they would have to admit there was a problem with their self…
Tiredofgames:
Welcome to LF….you’ve come to a great support and site full of educational info.
Read up…..as you know….it’s a long haul.
As far as CS goes…..if you have an order in place…..enforce it. If he’s not paying…..go to the district attorney for compliance enforcement.
Start recording his driving the new carl, maybe take a nice picture of the new wife and her beautiful ring… get a real goo close up of her with the kids…..and zoom in on the ring.
A nice shot of his new house etc…..as much documentation of lifestyle you can.
(COVERTLY). Of course.
Go to the county recorders online site and print off a copy of his deed for the new property.
If he says he has NO income….(like mine did)…..and he is married…..and buying nice stuff…..well….take him back to court with your documentation of his lifestyle and request an ‘up’ in CS.
A judge can ‘impute’ income if there is no proof, because he’s under the table.
They can also subpeona tax returns….a nice call to the IRS isn’t a bad idea either…..for tax evasion….(that can come in time)
You can also go back to family court and ask the judge for a judgement in the amount of back CS. Then….take that judgement and garnish his assets…..you might be driving that shiney new car after all! 🙂
So…..darlen…..start getting all your records and documents in order…..and TAKE HIM TO THE MAT!
It’s very doable.
Welcome Tiredofthegames You will find lot’s of support and good advice here. After reading your post I was hoping ErinBrock would respond – she ROCKS~!
Dear Tired,
I’m glad ErinB came on board, she is our resident WWW champ on taking them to the mat! Every one of the suggestions she gave you is a good one. Also, if that new house is NOT PAID FOR (bet it is not) he had to PROVE INCOME in order to get a mortgage so maybe your attorney or the judge can make them cough that up as well. The mortgage application!
In addition to the help you will find here (lots of it!) go to Dr. Leedom’s “raising the at risk child” (there’s a link on the left side of this blog) Dr. Leedom is also raising an at risk child (child of a P) and you are going to need all the support and help you can get if your child is already diagnosed ODD and you are having problems.
Glad you are here and keep on learning. Knowledge is our POWER! Lots of folks have kids with these monsters!
In your introductory section “Get him or her to walk away” is what I’m trying to do right now, so here’s some comments. BE CAREFUL. Legally you cannot ask a parent to give up their parental rights. This is called trying to seperate a child from a parent ie child abuse, and the sociopath can and will immediatley turn it around on you as being the bad guy. In CA a parent cannot give up parental rights without someone else ready to adopt, as CA does not want only one parent to have parental rights and then that parent die and the child ending up ward of the state. If they still have parental rights, BE CAREFUL about giving up child support. The child support is not yours, it is the child’s. Legally the sociopath could make you into the bad guy on this too. In my case I’m trying to offer a large lump sum to go away and maybe $5000 per year to stay away. Otherwise a sociopath will burn thru the lump sum fast, as they always do, and then, as they still have parental rights, could take you right back into court and demand their part in the child’s life again. So, all deals verbal, no witnesses for the sociopath etc. I’m just starting the process, may take years..who knows. In the meantime my son suffers. If anyone has more info on this please send it on over to me. Thanks, Ed
Very sane advice, Oakieed. Nice to see you again. I’m wishing you all the luck in the world with this.