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.
Dear Blueskies,
Hon, even though each of us experience this life we have lead differently, there are enough commonalities in how we have all experienced some of this “crazy” making with the psychopaths that believe it or not, I understand where you are….been there myself. In fact, I wrote an article about this sort of thing a while back that is here somewhere in the archives.
In our own pain, we strike out at the hand that is extended to us in comforting and caring assistance….when you are in SUCH pain, it consumes one. Once I fell and hurt my leg badly and my loving husband extended his hand to help me us and I SCREAMED at him “don’t touch me!!!!” Other times I have struck out at those that were trying to comfort me because I was in such pain!
Pain, your pain, my pain, other’s pains, according to dr. Viktor Frankl in his book “Man’s search for meaning” which he wrote after being in a Nazi concentration camp, “fills us entirely” whether it is a “small pain” or a “large one.”
A toddler who drops his toy cries TOTALLY IN PAIN of his loss, though WE as adults don’t see his loss as the “end of the world” HE DOES! So while others may not see your pain as the TOTALITY that it is, here on LF the other posters have experienced their own total loss and so WE grasp what you are going through much more easily.
I’m so glad you are here, this is a healing and caring place and you have fellow travelers here on our own journeys toward the ‘city limits of Healing”—- ((((hugs)))) and my prayers for you my dear!
Dear Blueeyes, I don’t think you need to apologize for “disappearing.” You were taking care of yourself — as you SHOULD. I don’t think there is a one of us that doesn’t understand that — because we have “been there,” too.
Peraonally, I’m very glad you are back. Even though, I still am a “newbie” here sort of, I missed you!!
My prayers and thoughts are with you as you continue your goal of getting rid of the abusers in your life. You’ll make it. I know you will.
Thank you both:) ANewLily and Oxy.
Blueskies, you are welcome. I am not going to apologize for mistakenly calling you “blueeyes” instead of “blueskies,” though. 😉
When I realized my mistake, I had pleasant memories of my mother’s and father’s sky blue eyes. (Mine are greenish blue)
They are long gone to their heavenly mansions but I still miss them and remember them fondly.
I have so often wished that other posters here had had parents like mine, instead of their disordered ones. My heart breaks just thinking about their loss — and additional wounds.
Dear Escapee,
My whole family is full of them, waaaaay back past my gg grandfather on one side and my g-grandfather on the other, and who knows how many more. Plus my sperm donor was a raving dangerous P, and my youngest biological son is one, and the x-wife of my other son is a P, both of my sons’ grandfathers are Ps, plus, I have worked for them, had them work for me, been busienss partners with them, dated them, had them as teachers in college, etc. i counted up the other day “just for fun:” and named off THE Ps I HAVE KNOWN and just off the top of my head came up with a list of 45 that had significantly impacted my life…not counting the ones that I knew that impacted others but not me directly.
Then if you count the ones that are not flaming Ps, but just jerks, that’s a lot of crap to deal with in even my entire 62 and a half years! I’m just tired of them, tired of the drama-rama and ready for some PEACE on EARTH! LOL
Hi Blueskies! Yes, I am still here reading, I feel crazy too, you guys are helping me figure things out!
Blueskies,
Welcome back, sweetheart!
We most certainly missed you although the lovely ShabbyChic seems to have missed you oodles and oodles! Such a loyal and sweet gal she is! And her rockin humor gives me plenty of happy giggles!
I can remember the emotional turmoil I dealt with in the aftermath of loving predators (yeah, ain’t that swell? more than one in my life, but they is in the past…gone, baby gone!)
What you have felt and are still feeling is quite natural. Some of it not so good but expected. I didn’t see you as throwing a tantrum and I bet noone else on LF thinks that either.
I saw/see you as a loving woman who is trying to heal herself from heartbreak, betrayal, deception and misery. That’s some big scary stuff to work through. The pain can be immense, unbearable at times. I get that, doll. We get that. We can understand and genuinely empathize with your situation, your experiences.
I think it’s great, super even that you’re back among your friends, your kindred spirits because guess what? You can “run to” us any time and we will be there with our arms wide open and ready to give you a good squeeze and hug!
**Good vibrations and positive healing energy for the lovely Blueskies**
Dear Blueskies,
Welcome back to your LF “home”….its safe here…to vent, to share, to express, to give and to receive…and most importantly to say whatever is on your mind…
I actually thought about my journey that initially landed me here.. and all of the two steps forward Ive accomplished as well as setbacks Ive experienced since the day I arrived here asking if I was crazy or the problem in my relationship with my xtox…. wow, was I in such a BAD PLACE, CONFUSED, HEART BROKEN, FEELING USED and ABUSED, etc. etc…
When I say its been a journey, it REALLY has been… stay committed to yourself, be true to your inner voice, embrace the lows and celebrate the highs…breathe, look up to the blueskies knowing THERE WILL BE BETTER DAYS….the safest place I run to now is to myself, my inner strength and reserve, in the past I ran from ME to others, now I turn to myself first before anyone else and let myself know there is someone who loves me and cares about me and will always be here for me…MYSELF! And when my foundation is challenged I have this safe healing place to turn to …to read inspirational words and seek support and advice. So glad you are here…dont be too hard on yourself… take one day at a time and know you are cared about and will be ok…its a journey…for us all… xoxo
I just finished reading this book last week.
There’s a lot of good information in it for parents, the general public, or anyone who wants to protect their children from predators.
It’s NOT going to make you feel better about the system, though. The system is screwed up.
I am also not sure I agree with how they integrated psychopathic tendancies into child molestation.
Page 129, “As a result, the successful child molesters described in this book would obtain lower scores on the Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (Hare, 1991), with any assigned score only reflecting the narcissistic tendancies commonly noted among this population.”
They came to this conclusion, because all but one of the offenders in the book had any other criminal history.
Although the author correctly makes the point that there are many “successful” child molesters in society that have never been caught or convicted, she fails to operate on that same premise when it comes to personality disorders, like psychopathy.
There are plenty of psychopaths out there who are committing crimes. They just have never been caught or convicted of their crimes. Just like there are child molesters out there who have never been caught or convicted.
So, to say that child molesters who do NOT have a criminal record or multiple marraiges would score low on Hare’s checklist could possibly be inaccurate or misleading, in my opinion.
It’s still a very good book with good information.
Definitely worth reading.
Correction:
NONE of the offenders described in the book (EXCEPT one), had any other criminal history.
Therefore, they concluded that these offenders would not score high on Hare’s checklist, because they did not have a criminal record.
Therefore, they seem to be linking psychopathy with being caught & convicted of a crime.