Lovefraud recently received the following e-mail from a reader:
My psychologist referred me to this web site. It’s terrific save one section: How can running away from these people be the only solution? Granted, it’s a stop-gap solution to protect yourself from future abuses; however, it’s not a solution for full/final resolution.
Allowing [them] to perpetuate their endeavors and perpetrate them on others only permits proliferation. Please tell me that there is some constructive, legal way to be proactive and preventative in a more communal fashion. I have visions of: 20 years from now they rule the world. It won’t be survival of the fittest. It will have become survival of the sickest.
To have to swallow this reality would be a further devastating blow to my slowly recovering resiliency.
There simply must be constructive ways to deal with these [people].
We all know this reader’s frustration. It seems like sociopaths are able to lie, cheat, steal, abuse, damage and injure with impunity. How can this be? Isn’t there anything we can do?
Running away
Let’s first address the issue of running away. This is the best thing to do if you are observant enough to see the signs of sociopathic behavior before you become entangled. If you know what to look for and see the red flags, or if your instincts tell you that someone is trouble, get out. You should not knowingly allow a sociopath into your life if it can be at all avoided.
Many of our readers, however, are already caught in the sociopath’s web of deceit. You have fallen in love, married the sociopath, had children with him or her, or given the person money. Or, the sociopath is a family member. Somehow, the predator already has a piece of you.
You may have been emotionally, physically or financially abused for a long time. You’ve been criticized, denigrated and told that you have mental problems. You’ve lost your confidence and your sense of self. You wonder if you are, in fact, going crazy.
At this point, you must break away from the sociopath to begin restoring your mental health. You must take yourself out of the sociopath’s game. Any time you see, talk to or exchange e-mail with a sociopath, you are opening yourself to further manipulation. He or she knows exactly how to pull you in again, and will do it.
You may call it running away; Lovefraud calls it No Contact. It’s the best way to begin healing.
Criminal prosecution
But how can you take action against the sociopath? How can the sociopath be held accountable? How can he or she be prevented from devastating someone else?
Unfortunately, it is not illegal to be a sociopath. Therefore, action can only be taken based on what a sociopath does, and many typical sociopathic behaviors are legal.
- It is legal to cheat on a spouse or intimate partner.
- It is legal to lie, except under oath and on some official documents (which never stopped a sociopath).
- It is legal for a sociopath to talk someone into giving him or her money.
Many sociopaths know exactly where the legal lines are, and manage to stay in the gray area without crossing over them. Their actions are unethical, but not illegal.
Criminal prosecution only becomes possible when a sociopath violates the law—which many of them do. Prisons are full of sociopaths.
So prosecution is possible when a law is violated, but whether it actually happens depends on the seriousness of the crime. Most murder cases get investigated. Most fraud cases don’t, especially if it’s a sweetheart scam.
Lovefraud usually recommends reporting a sociopath’s crime, even if it is not likely to be investigated. If a sociopath is doing something illegal to you, he or she is probably also doing it to someone else. Maybe if a pattern develops, authorities will take action.
Civil lawsuits
The other option is civil court—suing the sociopath. Unfortunately this will cost you money that you may not have if the sociopath has wiped you out. Then, even if you file a lawsuit, win your case and get a judgment, it may be difficult or impossible to actually get your money. Sociopaths are notorious for blowing through money; there may be nothing left for you to collect.
The whole process of taking a sociopath to court will financially and emotionally drain you. The sociopath, however, looks at a court battle as a game—a game that he or she is determined to win. And they’re good at the game. They bend the rules to suit their purposes. They put on a great show for the judge, even as they perjure themselves. They find attorneys who are equally cold-hearted, or who are so dazzled that they believe the sociopath’s lies.
Many judges, in the meantime, are as ignorant about sociopaths as you were. They hear the sociopath say, “I’m only concerned about the welfare of our children,” or, “I never meant any harm,” and believe the hollow words.
Exposing the sociopath
If you can’t take legal action, you may want to at least expose the sociopath to save someone else from being victimized. You may post the sociopath on Don’t Date Him Girl or other websites that name cheaters. You may get away with it. Or, if the sociopath you expose has resources and likes the lawsuit game (see above), you may find yourself in court, accused of libel or invasion of privacy.
Here’s another complication: There are no legal guidelines for when or how it is permissible to say someone is a sociopath. Media lawyers frequently do not allow the publications or TV shows they represent to call someone a sociopath. This may be the case even if the person making the statement is an expert. When his show about Ed Hicks was taped, Dr. Phil referred to Hicks as a sociopath. Dr. Phil certainly knows a sociopath when he sees one, but the show’s lawyers cut the term “sociopath” from the broadcast.
For this reason, Lovefraud is extremely careful with naming names. According to our terms of service, readers may not post the names of the sociopaths they have experienced in comments to this blog. And when Lovefraud does a case study in which we do identify a con artist, every single statement made about the subject of the story is documented with evidence.
Lovefraud does believe, however, that exposing sociopaths is the only thing that really works. In the future, we hope to offer a Con Artist Database to help our readers. But this is a project with many technical and legal challenges (see above). We look forward to the day when we can tackle them.
What should you do?
So what’s the bottom line? If you’ve been victimized by a sociopath, what should you do?
First, take care of yourself. Extricate yourself from the predator’s grip. That’s what No Contact is all about—escape and recovery.
Then you have to evaluate your situation to determine if further action is possible and worth the trouble. Every case is different. What did the sociopath do? Was it illegal? Do you have evidence or documentation? Do you have the money to pursue action? Do you have the emotional stamina?
If you have a good case, and the resources, by all means take action. Or, if you can’t do it now, maybe you can do it later, after you are healed.
As the saying goes, “revenge is a dish best served cold.” It took me five years, but I finally exposed my ex-husband, James Montgomery. He was fired from his job and forced into bankruptcy.
I will admit—it was satisfying.
No Ox they smoke it!!!
The wolves do, but the sheep eat it! LOL GREAT PUN and I didn’t even realize I did it! hee hee I’m so funny! LOL
Well as some of you may know, I am taking my Spath to court for the $7500 he owes me. I have a signed agreement from him. He was served on March 23, 2011. He has until today to respond to the court and to my attorney.
BTW, I have had NC since October 22, 2010.
WELL…..today he sent me a text that read “I have to answer to the court today. How I answer depends on whether or not you communicate with me about this”.
Can you say CONTROL???? I find this text very threatening. He is basically saying to me his answer to the court is going to depend on whether I communicate with him. So what? Is he going to lie to the court if I don’t answer him, OR tell the truth if I do answer him. I WILL NOT CONTACT HIM. This is his last ditch effort to control the situation and ME.
Just two weeks ago, he was love bombing me with texts. I keep ALL texts from him until this court thing is over.
I am asking for prayers from my LF friends that JUSTICE will prevail for me.
Thank you everyone!
LF is soooooo right. They NEVER give up!
Dear Schnoodle,
Of course it is CONTROL! LOL ROTFLMAO how he tries his last ditch effort to control, and then when he doesn’t pay he will say “I gave you a chance to communicate with me” LOL
I think you are wasting your time as far as getting the money back, but who knows, you may be one of the VERY FEW who do get some money back, but it may not be worth it in the end if you figure $ per hour of time, much less aggravation. I do understand your desire though for justice and I DO PRAY YOU GET IT! At least you can say you tried!
Hang on to the NC and congratulations for going this long! (((hugs)))
Schnoodley do!
NICE! And yea, it’s control alright.
I applaud your efforts at getting justice for yourself with regards to the money. Good for you!
And I will say a prayer for you about it too.
LL
😀 you two are funny…Schnoodle and Oxy…and i see you like the spanish word cojones. It’s a very expressive word, though rather vulgar i must say. The strong sound of the letter J also contributes to it.
It’s pronounced coJOnes (testicles), the stress in the second syllable. It’s the plural of coJÓn (testicle), which in singular sounds even more vulgar. There are lots of colloquial expressions (at least in the Spanish from Spain, i don’t know if it’s the same in the Spanish from America) with this word, most of them related to being brave or being not “tener cojones” “no tener cojones” to have balls or to have them not, being brave or being not. And it’s also very common in the use you mentioned to have somebody caught by his balls, tener a alguien cogido por los cojones/huevos.
Cajón/cajones means drawer/drawers of furniture, also with the stress in their second syllable, so even meaning very different things depending on the context no spanish speaker is going to miss you meant cojones but they’ll laugh.
I’ve kept the word from you because it sounds very humoristic.
Now there’s another way of calling a spath coward: cojón-less creature….jajajaja
I just re-read what I wrote, and yeah, it sounds ridculous….spathsjust want t be loved.
I guess I don’t know where I stand on this right now.
I do feel some compassion for them, although I don’t want anything to do with them.
I have my own issues and know that although I have hurt people, it was never my intent to do so…not my motivation.
I knowI feel empathy and compassion, but I have still done wrong, and I have still hurt people, and most of it was driven by a desire to be loved.
So, maybe I’m projecting me onto them.
I guess I don’t know what motivates them, but am still looking for something that makes sense.
It is true that I want to forgive. Hasn’t happened 100% yet, but it’s something I am working toward, and one of the ways to do this is to have compassion for their plight.
I don’t want to live in angerand contempt. I want to move on from that.
I understand that being angry and harboring an unforgiving attitude is perceived as self preservation, and the very idea of forgiving is unthinkable to many of us. But it’s what I want for myself.
I don’t know hw positive it is for me to continue to stick around LF. Sometimes it seems like everybody is just constantly reliving their trauma, and reinforcing the pathways in their brains that keep them traumatized.
I really want to einforce a positive and spiritual understandingin myself.
So, ight now I’m wondering what is the next right thing to do.
Oops. Wrong thread. Sorry. My above post was in response to LL on the empathy/evil thread.
Kim, probably most of us wonder the same: what’s the next right thing to do?
I don’t find people on LF are negative but they want to know, not about the spaths, or no once we’ve learnt what was enough to learn, but they want to know about themselves.
I personally right know i’m curious about those that surround the psychos. Lately i have the idea that spaths alone are not a great danger but that those you here call enables, the long-term ones, are the most dangerous. Maybe i’m wrong but that’s my feeling: the more numerous little psychos are a more negative influence in our lifes. I have to develop the idea, but by the moment i shit in the enables of the psychopaths.
Kimmy,
I’ve been out of mine about four months now. it’s true that people here are in different parts of their journey. I’m still trying to wrap my mind around all of it. I also have a family full of P’s. This has added to the dimension of psychpathology for me.
I understand what you’re saying about reliving trauma, but I think it’s less that than trying to understand it. If the process is one that is bringing closure for you, then maybe LF is just a bit much for where you’re at? I personally find your posts interesting because as people get further along in their process, the wisdom of others who have been there done that, often is very helpful.
I don’t expect to be here forever. There will come a time when life will move on, but for right now, I’m still working through the early part of recovery.
LL