Last week I heard from a woman who realized that her work supervisor was probably disordered.
The Lovefraud reader was hired by a school system to work one-on-one with a special needs child, but what she was directed to do made no sense. When she asked the school district’s “professionals” about the “therapy,” since, in her experience, it was inappropriate for the child’s needs, they seemed uncomfortable and never really answered her. The supervisor, in the meantime, became belligerent. The Lovefraud reader saw that the supervisor was controlling, the professionals were intimidated, and the child was not receiving the right care.
The Lovefraud reader was so upset that she took medical leave, and the supervisor asked her to resign. She is now unemployed.
After describing the experience, our Lovefraud reader asked: “Do we really just stand by and let these people hurt children, innocent disabled children, workers underneath them, and look the other way?”
Aggressive personalities
This is the most frustrating and disheartening aspect of learning what sociopaths are: Now we can identify them. We know what they are doing. We know that whomever they are doing it to will be damaged. And we feel like we can’t stop the exploiters.
Sociopaths, through charm, deceit and ruthlessness, ensconce themselves in positions of power, whether it’s in a work environment, an organization, a social network or a family. Their objective is to maintain power and control.
Dr. George K. Simon explains this in his book, Character Disturbance. He writes:
Aggressive personalities strive for the dominant position at all times and in all circumstances. This premise is very hard for the average person, especially the neurotic individual, to understand, let alone accept. It’s incomprehensible for most of us to conceive that in every situation, every encounter, every engagement, the aggressive personality is predisposed to jockey with us for the superior position, even in situations with no recognizable need to do so. The failure to understand and accept this, however, is how aggressive personalities so often succeed in their quest to gain advantage over others.
Sociopaths manipulate their way into dominant positions, and then continue to manipulate in order to stay there. The longer they are in these dominant positions, the more power they accumulate, and the less others are willing to go up against them.
And then we come along, perceive the dynamic, see the damage, and want to do something about it.
Understand the reality
I am all for exposing sociopaths in any way possible. I want to hold them accountable. I want justice for the people they victimize. I want to prevent them from hurting anyone else. But before I suggest that you take any action, I want to make sure you understand what you are dealing with. Here are some points to keep in mind:
1. Sociopaths are ruthless in pursuit of their objective. They will cajole, lie, cheat or bully—whatever gets them what they want. They do not care about following the rules, protocol or even the law. If sociopaths decide it’s more convenient to stay within the law, they may go right to the edge but not break it. Sociopaths are experts at operating in the gray areas.
2. People around the sociopath are likely already compromised. The sociopath has probably lined up allies, or at least people who are afraid to go against him or her. These people have been brown-nosed, bought off or intimidated.
3. You may already be compromised. If a sociopath is preparing to discard you, or perceives you as a threat, he or she may have launched a smear campaign, convincingly expressing concern about your behavior or mental stability to everyone you know. By the time you approach them with your concerns, they are primed to discount whatever you say.
4. The authorities may not act. Unless a law has clearly been broken, the police won’t do anything. And unless a case can be proven and won in court, a prosecutor won’t file charges. Also, whether law enforcement or any other authority decides to look into a matter may depend on the organization’s politics.
5. Sociopaths relish confrontation, and view it as a game to win. Even if you manage to get the person in court or some other arbitration venue, he or she will put on an incredible performance—using tears, righteous indignation, whatever—in order to come out on top. They are very, very good at it.
You come first
This is all really depressing. Do we really just stand by watching sociopaths run rampant, from one victim to the next?
Here’s the most important thing to keep in mind when contemplating exposing a sociopath: Your first responsibility is to yourself.
Are you in a position of strength? Your physical safety is most important, but you also need to be concerned about your financial, reputational and legal safety. When the sociopath counterattacks, which he or she will do, can you withstand it?
If you can’t engage a sociopath head-on, can you do anything covertly? Perhaps you can quietly tell people what the sociopath is really like, and let word-of-mouth take over.
If you decide to take on the sociopath, you’ll need two things: irrefutable evidence of the sociopath’s behavior, and nerves of steel. Many Lovefraud readers have no choice but to face the sociopath in court. If you do, you’ll need to stay calm, collected and professional at all times. The sociopath will most likely try to get an emotional reaction out of you. Do not react it’s like feeding the beast.
Spread the word
Perhaps it’s too dangerous for you to try to expose the particular sociopath that you tangled with. It doesn’t mean you have to stay totally silent on the subject.
Whenever an opportunity arises, teach people the basic truths about sociopaths: They exist, and they are destructive. Learn the signs of sociopathic behavior and explain them to others. If we raise the general awareness of these predators, there will be fewer people for them to victimize.
Donna, another very important article, and thank you.
I feel that everyone in the County where I live should know what the exspath has done – they should. He is a fraud, he is a liar, and he has committed what constitutes as a Federal Crime. The ramifications of what his choices have been have fallen squarely upon my shoulders – for whatever reason – and I am now in a literal fight for survival, on every level.
I also realize that the hard evidence that I have amassed is meaningless, legally. So….with that in mind, I am simmering down and attempting to avoid any discussion about the details of my situation.
I don’t have the stamina – emotionally, physically, or financially – to endure any further actions with regard to the exspath. And, as for warning people about him? I cannot control what people will, or will not, choose to believe.
I have much more important things to concentrate on.
Brightest blessings
Thank you Donna for this new article on an much controversial point. It’s a difficult decision to take, or at least one that deserves thoughtful consideration given the risk involved in terms of our safety and the high emotional investment in any dealings with not just a sociopath but an enraged and vindictive sociopath. I, for my part, almost got sued by my ex-spath for alleged defamation. I needed to inform a company about the reason why I couldn’t continue to appear in the show, and the ‘big word (S)’ could have cost me being incarcerated or pay a high fine. It all ended up being hot air but I could have spared myself many days of emotional and physical stress and countless sleepless nights all the while until everything was resolved to my advantage. It pays off to be cautious when exposing a S. We need to do our best to expose the wrongdoings of Spaths but we must be on the safe side and protect ourselves from possible adverse consequences.
I think the short answer is yes.
When attempting to discredit a SP we are working against a clever con. Exposing his dark side makes us appear to be experiencing “sour grapes” …”if I can’t have him/her I want to make sure his life is miserable without me”.
While pretending to be charming, caring, nice folks they also encourage others to believe that their victims have mental issues…their victims are not to be trusted or believed.
You might be able to alert those who have not yet made contact with him/her, but those who have already been charmed will likely decide that the perp is so wonderful that he must be in the right…and you must really be looney tunes and vindictive to “make up” nasty stories about someone as likeable as him.
So, I think it is best to keep your allegations to yourself. Those who are smitten aren’t going to believe you anyway. Think about it, could you have been convinced that you were dealing with a bad guy once you were under his spell?
Even if you gave any credence to anyone else’s alligations, he’d tell you convincing lies (to keep you)and discredit the whistle blower (you should avoid).
The best thing to do is to collect hard evidence. PROOF can back you up, if necessary, when his charm ultimately convinces others to avoid listening to your unfounded rants.
Thank you for this Donna. The story hits close to home. The exspath currently works with disabled children that he testified ‘don’t speak.’ Even after he was charged with child abuse of my son he continued to work there. When he showed up for court on the charges, one of his supervisors was there to testify on his behalf!
Have lost many hours of sleep terrified for the children, including my own of course. I went to the police with my suspicions who told me that unless I had something ‘solid’, there was nothing they could do.
It is a really difficult situation when there are children involved. When I called the department of education they told me that there was nothing they can do because he was charged, not convicted.
I could see the xspath trying to bring up defamation charges and then we end up in trouble for trying to expose their abuses.
What an on point article Donna. I struggle a lot with the idea of exposing my ex. It infuriates me that he just lives “under the radar” or in the “grey area”. Just today someone told me that he problem is that everything he is doing is carefully planned so that he can skirt the laws or be “below the radar”. This is infuriating because most of the things are still crimes, but not obvious enough or with enough evidence for a prosecutor to go after it. I am starting to think that unless a person stabs someone in front of hundreds of witnesses or shoots a ton of people in a movie theatre…its a toss up as to whether the state will bother going after the person.
Worse yet, some spaths keep cops in their pocket, just in case they need a cover. Mine did. He had the cops doing his dirty work for him.
Skylar, absolutely – I have to be very, very cautious about the exspath’s actions. I speak only that which can be proven through hard, physical evidence and I try to leave my emotions out of the situation.
Also, with regard to the colleague’s “notice to vacate,” I must be very, very careful about that, as well. The interesting thing about THIS situation is that there are actually some people who clearly see that my colleague’s girlfriend is what she is. And, they are actually (seriously) dropping “hints” about the fact that marriage will not erase any minor personality issues and that the bond of the legal contract of marriage invariably creates worse issues that were simply ignored.
“Outing” a spath is probably the most dangerous endeavor, on every level.
Brightest blessings
I am getting ready to face off with my husband in court. He is a full blown, poster child for psychopathy. When we reprint Webster’s dictionary, his picture needs to be next to the definition of a psychopath.
I went to my local county domestic violence shelter for advice yesterday. They suggested that when I go to court – I cannot afford an attorney – that I have everything I need to show proof of his fraud with our taxes.
I advised her that I have a black notebook “color coded” by sections in my book. Indeed, the majority of the transgressions of this person are “under the radar”. The emotional abuse and the manipulative behaviors. Sadly, my psychopath has committed fraud. This is a felony offense. My psychopath would now fall into the “white” collar crime group. He has officially crossed over to the criminal psychopath definition and I have the proof.
The confidence and self assured person that God created has returned to the building. I will be totally prepared emotionally when I face him first in the mediation process later this month.
I dont know if my psychopath will ever “pay” for his transgressions against me and all the other women he abused over the course of 40 years of his life, but I do know that he will be brought to court for some of our legal woes. I do know that the “truth” about this person will fall upon deaf ears for those that still buy the bullshit he doles out to all of them. He has been doing this a long time and he is very, very good at it. Most are to have survived this long without legal punishment. They know the game.
We will just see how “crazy” I really am….one thing he will never do to me is make me cry. Never again.
I have very little faith in law enforcement or the legal system, especially after reading Jaycee Dugard’s story and the numerous mistakes that were made that might have led to her discovery – or prevented her kidnapping in the first place. Having said that, most of you know I dated a spath for less than 3 short months, and realizing what he was was completely devastating for me, even after this short time. I DID expose him, but in the right place, and I got lucky. He was in the army. Apparently, the army had suspected malingering (faking a medical disability to get out). When I turned him in for adultery, they asked me questions. My answers ended up being the nail in his coffin. I will never know how the army punished him for fraud and adultery but he was found guilty of both. He disappeared from my social circle, and I have not seen or heard from him in over 4 years. It took a full year to recover from the brief exploitive relationship.
Exposing him in the social circle (an internet forum we both belonged to) was much more difficult. I got a lot of disbelief and backlash about being “vindictive” and bringing “drama” onto the forum. So I told a very few well-selected internet friends there. The friends believed me, and they helped guard the forum against his return. When he reappeared a year later, they confronted him on his lies and ran him off the forum. I sat back and watched, grateful that I can continue my membership there. It was a great feeling to have a few people on my side.
I also warned another woman from the forum who lived in his town whom he had visited (unbeknownst to me). At the time, I was still addicted to him, and I feared he’d also had an affair with her, which would have killed me. To my relief, he had not hit on her; instead he wore his wedding ring around her and mentioned his wife (he never did this with me). She was glad for the warning, and she believed me. So my experiences outing a spath were mixed. (My thinking on why he didn’t hit on her was that A) she wasn’t that attractive to him and/or B) she had nothing to offer him, as she was about to be homeless. But he may not have known that at the time – he had to check it out).
It was very rewarding when some others believed me, and those others were able to support me and get him convicted. I cannot imagine having to just run without any kind of validation from the outside world. At the time, I had the overwhelming desire to protect my community from him. I hope I was able to do that in some small way.
Hope52, I would love to be able to reassure you that the Legal system will be just. I realy wish that I could do this with complete confidence.
As it is, I have NO confidence (caps for emphasis), faith, or trust in the legal system or Law Enforcement. The exspath has committed a Federal Crime and I have hard physical evidence that proves this – he forged my signature (and, wrote his own) on my individual financial drafts that exceed 75K USD. The coercion and at-will depletion through cash withdrawals totals well over 250K USD – and, this doesn’t include additional inheritances from other bequeathments.
The exspath is not going to face a single Federal charge. He is not going to be arrested, fingerprinted, or even questioned. He will never face a single consequence for his financial frauds. And, I could place $10 million on the emotional damages that I wil carry with me to the end of my days, and so what? Because the exspath did not rob me of millions, he’s small fries and unimportant.
This fact, alone, that he is “small fries” and that his crimes do not warrant prosecution and punitive consequences is precisely WHY spaths are able to walk away and leave their victims destitute and utterly ruined, on every level.
This is what needs to change: punitive damages and lifelong restitution to victims of fraud. LIFETIME restitution – for the rest of the spath’s life, they should pay restitution.
Just my 2 cents