By Ox Drover
I recently read The Socially Skilled Child Molester: Differentiating the Guilty from the Falsely Accused, by Carla van Dam, Ph.D.
Carla van Dam, Ph.D., is a clinical and forensic psychologist who has practiced in the U.S. and Canada, and taught in several universities. She is well known in the community of those who focus on primary prevention strategies to help end child sexual abuse. One of her previous books was Identifying Child Molesters: Preventing Child Sexual Abuse by Recognizing the Patterns of Offenders.
Several of the reviews of this book pretty well sum up my opinion of this well-written book.
“The Socially Skilled Child Molester provides a thorough description of common types of child molesters, most importantly, distinguishing between ”˜grabbers’ and ”˜groomers.’” Kelly Simonson, Ph.D.
“A provocative analysis of four types of smarter, richer, socially skilled and often litigious offenders as opposed to the cruder, more frequently captured types. Such offenders, whom the author calls ”˜groomers,’ usually spend more time cultivating the good graces of family members, neighborhoods, and whole communities rather than selecting and seducing their victims. These offenders are usually regarded as upstanding pillars of the community, and include businessmen, priests, judges, coaches, teachers and volunteers”¦” Thomas R. O’Connor, Ph.D.
“Carla van Dam carefully describes the various child molesters who sit next to us in our churches and synagogues, go to the theater, and eat in the same restaurants with us. They continue to harm children because they fool us into thinking that such nice guys couldn’t do such a terrible thing.” Lenore E. Walker, Ed.D. (Dr. Walker was a pioneer in the defense of women who faced criminal charges for attacking their long-time abusers. Her books include The Battered Woman, The Battered Woman Syndrome, Handbook of Child Sexual Abuse, and Abused Women and Survivor Therapy.)
Having personally been well acquainted for a number of years with one of the most prolific child abusers, totaling over 1500 victims, Charles “Jackie” Walls, III, who is currently serving life without parole in Arkansas Department of Corrections, I know how easy it is for these “socially skilled” child molesters to pass for “upstanding citizens” in the community for decades, all the while doing damage to so many. Though I never liked Jackie because he was an obvious narcissistic creep, it never dawned on me, I never had the faintest inkling, that he was living this dual life of upstanding family man and Boy Scout volunteer of the year during the daytime, and monster at night.
Dr. van Dam’s book gives a clear and precise directions for spotting the warning signs in a predator who is socially skilled and highly thought of in the community, who presents himself as the “too good to be true” businessman, priest, rabbi, physician, nurse, volunteer, etc., who is too helpful, too private, too attentive to children, too touchy with children, too involved with image management, too one-sided in relationships, always giving, never taking, too opportunistic, too superficial, too prone to violate boundaries of personal space and privacy, too aggressive when confronted, too quick to drop friendships when children grow older, too likely to disappear when contact with children is denied, altogether too charming . . . and, too good to be true.
Dr. van Dam divides her book into 10 chapters, as follows:
Chapter 1. “Understanding the Problem” focuses on the fact that the “groomers,” as she calls them, are well-socialized child molesters and behave as if they were addicted to sexual contact with children.
Chapter 2. “Child Molesters in Their Natural Habitat” familiarizes readers with the operating styles of the groomers and allows them to notice the often-predictable practices so that readers can more effectively prevent child sexual abuse.
Chapter 3. “Current Practices” provides the reader with information on the inadequacies of the way child sexual abuse is addressed by communities.
Chapter 4. “Not All Child Molesters Are Alike.” This chapter gives a closer focus on the vocabulary used to describe sexual misconduct. Child molesters do much damage to children by first carefully grooming adults in order to gain access to children.
Chapter 5. “Common Misperceptions.” This chapter focuses on groomers’ excuses and explanations when their conduct is challenged. These are hackneyed clichés that are often misconstrued as sincere. Everyone needs to know these well enough to recognize them when they occur.
Chapter 6. “Accurately Differentiating Danger.” This provides the framework to understand how the behaviors of groomers often vary from those whose conduct should not be worrisome. It points out that behavioral patterns of successful groomers vary significantly from those who are not child molesters.
Chapter 7. “A Framework for Understanding Child Sexual Abuse.” Using an iceberg as an analogy of the groomer’s behavior, this chapter gives information to the reader about how to expose the groomer’s operating strategies to protect children.
Chapter 8. “Interviewing Child Molesters.” This shows the reader that though groomers are incredibly successful liars, the lies they tell can be identified, and are often predictable. This allows the reader to be less gullible and better protect their children.
Chapter 9. “Predicting Risk.” This chapter deals with differentiating convicted offenders from the less to the more dangerous.
Chapter 10. “Incorporating Corroborating Evidence.” This chapter brings all the information together for both professionals and for families in ways to network in the community to protect our children from predators.
This book, in my opinion, is a must-have for anyone who wants to protect children, in their own home and in the community. While Dr. van Dam does not think that all pedophiles qualify as psychopaths, she does say that they “lack empathy, and experience no real remorse as shown by their actual behaviors.”
Although this book focuses on child molesters, many of the practices that the groomers use are familiar to some of us who have met sociopaths who looked like such “good people” and turned out to be such bad nightmares. The book may also be interesting to people who want to understand more about how a bad person can hide in plain sight.
To purchase the book, go to Amazon.com:
The Socially Skilled Child Molester: Differentiating the Guilty from the Falsely Accused.
If this is the case, then psychopaths in sexual “relationships” with adults should more accurately be called adult molesters or adult groomers. It also means that tactics like parental involvement when their grown child is exposed to a potential P/S may work, because it shows the predator that a parent will look out for their child even if grown.
I’ve always believed that the difference between a psychopath in an adult sexual relationship and a child molester is simply that psychopaths target adults.
Your comments about sociopaths not being straight or gay also apply to pedophiles, who are not considered to be gay if they go after kids of the same sex, or straight if they go after kids of the opposite sex. Kids are what the pedophile is attracted to. Likewise, the psychopath uses sexual relationships to gain power over adults.
Dear Brian,
RIGHT YOU ARE!!! Part of the differences though is that our ADULT children don’t always listen to us and as ADULTS can make their OWN decisions about having sex with a Psychopath.
My son C was targeted by a P, and he married her….later, she tried to kill him, but in the meantime during the marriage she distanced him from his family so that she could keep control over him.
I never liked this woman from the get-go, she was deceptive, that was all I could make out, just DECEPTIVE…I cautioned my son to WAIT about marrying her, but in fact this ended up getting her to push for immediate marriage “before your mother breaks us up” She “won” and I “lost” that round. It took almost 8 years before he was released from his marriage vows (he took them SERIOUSLY and though he was not happy wit hher after the first few months, he doggedly stuck to them) when she tried to kill him. Her going to jail was the best thing that ever happened to him. Now I have my son back, and a wiser son he is. He now knows about psychopaths!
OMG, Brian, thank you for saying this:
If this is the case, then psychopaths in sexual “relationships” with adults should more accurately be called adult molesters or adult groomers. It also means that tactics like parental involvement when their grown child is exposed to a potential P/S may work, because it shows the predator that a parent will look out for their child even if grown.
In my case, it’s absolutely what happened, I can see it clearly now. he’s my parents’ age and he did treat me with utmost “grooming and respect”. He “was like a father figure to me, and a friend and a lover”. My parents tried to warn me but I shut them right out. How precisely you put this: adult molesters. Thank you.
Katya,
In the past I have been warned by others to NOT TRUST psychopaths, and they had already GROOMED me to where I would NOT listen to my friends and family’s warning. The “love bombing” and “grooming” that the Ps do early on make us “deaf” to the WARNINGS.
There are several threads here about “should I warn the next victim?” He/She will probably NOT listen to you because of teh “groomer’s” pulling the wool over their eyes AT FIRST and hooking them in. One of the Ps I was warned about i went to work for her, another one I was warned about was a business partner….IN THE FUTURE, I WILL LISTEN TO WARNINGS, but at the time, I didn’t listen because I thought the person warning me had an agenda or was just “wrong”—-my son C did not listen to me either when I tried to warn him about his GF, later wife, and now, thank you God! X-wife!!!!
Over and over I have seen posts here about people being warned and not listening, or warning and not being heard! The Ps are CRAFTY and many times make us feel “special” and maybe they cheated on their X-wife, but she was a biatch and they would never cheat on US, because we are “special”—NOT!!! If they will do bad things to others they will do them to us in time.
OxDrover,
I think we cannot give up, should not give up with the Warnings. Going back to the beginning of time, it’s the fight of good vs evil. If we stop warning or trying to warn, if we stop educating, and stand by licking our wounds, what does this make us? I am looking for ways to warn his other victims. I want to protect my son, self and family first and foremost, but I will not be at peace until he shows his true face to them (the one that is behind the mask). Maybe, it’s wrong and maybe, I will lose, but I will “die standing”.
His daughter who had suffered with him plenty said that my son’s spirit “chose us as parents” for higher learning. Is this a victim mentality or what? Lucky for me, enough people believe me and believe in me that I won’t need her testimony and if I do, I will compel her through court. You are right – they will do it again and again. But, I want to prevent the hurt he’s bound to cause and I do want to punish him. What does this make me?
Dear Katya,
One of the things about a psychopath is that “punishment” doesn’t faze them….even PRISON. My P-son is in prison, has spent 100% of his adult life there (except for 4 months) he is 38, and he still considers himself A SUCCESS. DUH?!?
If you wil lread Dr. Robert Hare’s book, “Without Conscience” (Dr. Hare is THE premiere P researcher) he will tell you that punishment has NO effect on them.
Also, as we get further along the road toward Healing our desires to punish them seem in most cases to get less and less until we are at a point we neither hate them or love them, we reach INDIFFERENCE.
We would have to make a career out of “warning” their next victims, because when they get done with one they pick another. I have come to the conclusion as have many others that trying to keep a jump ahead of them to warn their next victims (who 99.9% of the time–I made up that statistic!) won’t listen anyway. It ends up EATING at our souls, renting them rooms in our minds, heads and hearts, and keeps the scabs torn off our wounds so they will never heal.
Your feeling this way though, is very normal and natural and is a ‘stage” on the “road to healing”–I doubt that it will last as you get further alone, though, but don’t worry—you will move to and through the stages of healing as you are ready.
As for your son, I know that you want to protect him from your X, that will in itself be a BIG JOB! ((((hugs)))) and my prayers.
Thank you for your wisdom, OxDrover. I hope I will soon be at that other stage you speak of. This is something that I have as a part of my personality: righteousness. I often stood on the side of the oppressed and that is how I gained respect, but most importantly – others’ notice of those who are victimized (be it by the system or their circumstance). I know prison does nothing for the psychopath, because punishment has to be of different nature: their failure at manipulative success would be their natural punishment. PAIN of HAVING to work HARD labor 10 hours a day would be a punishment. Our prisons are not made this way but for once, I am for GULAGs. Self – pity, – why they can have it till they drown in it. I know I am rambling I am sorry. Thank you for reading this…
Btw, I may have said it elsewhere: he has NO idea how much he’s helping me recover with his clown court case. He has no idea how much better off I am after he’s shown who he is to me. If he had just moved on with no consequence to either one of us, I think I’d be more depressed, more in pain and would have never found this site, sought support for my Mental Health and been so in – tune with my family members. Meanwhile, I had to apologize to my parents who heard “Stay out of it” way too often from me and who heard “he’s better than any of you” once too much. I had to apologize to my kids and I had to accept my faults and guilt and stupidity. “Duty to warn” is something I was taught. I hope this boundary will be ever more clear to me. Thank you!
I am sorry about your son. There seems to be a definite commonality: despite it all, they feel entitled and they feel well achieved. Mine said a lot: I am a good guy. I now know what he meant. (it’s who you compare him to).
Hey Katya,
Believe me, even if your “personal” P gets away, you will find that the more you learn about these disordered, evil creeps, the easier they will be to spot. And you’ll find yourself warning others in ways you never dreamed.
My youngest daughter calls these abilities “our new superpowers.” You’ll have plenty of opportunity to warn others about S/N/Ps in general. So even if you lose the game with “your” P, you might win in your attempts to warn others. Heck, by posting here, you’re doing it right now!
🙂 Good point. I like “new superpowers”, your daughter is a bright kid.