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.
If you can prove the signature was FORGED the BANK is responsible….you will need an attorney though, I would go after them.
If you cause the spath to lose his job, how does that effect you? loss of child support?
Skylar & OxD – thank you for your input. These series of forgeries was unknown to me until after the exspath left. I had been questioning him about details about WHERE my inheritance had gone and he kept telling me that (and, I quote), “It’s all tied up in real estate. I’m NOT your EX!” LOLOLOLOL……tied up, alright. I’ve consulted an attorney that is specific on the banking Law and the response was that the banks send out monthly statements and the policy is that the customer has 30 days to dispute any part of the statement. Well, of course, I never saw the BANKING statements – only the quarterly investment statements.
The divorce attorney doesn’t want to take action as I’ll lose spousal support. I’m going to lose spousal support, anyway – since he left he’s earned about 20K in 5 months and he is not paying ANY obligations of any sort. It is my strong belief that he’s socking that money away in cash and preparing to EXIT his job.
Of course, when I mention this to most people, they stare at me as if I were some wayward child making up stories about dragons and human sacrifices. If someone can set up a person to rob them, live a sordid, risky, and repulsive double-life, and leave their spouse destitute and on the street, they can sure as hell set aside cash to quit their job and leave the State.
I would like to see that thing serve time for what he did. And, yes – I have hard documentation of his forgeries. DOZENS of them amounting to over 75K where he paid cash to HIMSELF and wrote his own stinking signature on my drafts!
What frightens me most is not that he’s going to skip town, but he has probably already begun setting up ANOTHER woman who is independently wealthy (or, married to a wealthy husband) and will pity him for his claim of being an “abused” husband. I have no doubt that he’s doing this, or that he’s done it already and was just waiting for me to get sick enough to die instead of having to go through divorce.
Yeah, these musings sound extremely paranoid if one doesn’t know the whole story, but a friend of mine asked me just last night if the exspath had a life insurance policy on me. I answered that I didn’t have any idea and she responded that I had better find out so that he doesn’t “benefit from (my) death.” Frigging creepy, devious, and remorseless people!
had a very weird day yesterday. my nerves were frayed to within an inch. i was at the grocery store, and it was really crazy busy. i saw this guy walking with his child. he was really loud and douchey in his swagger and need for attention. i was immediately uncomfortable with the is guy. within a couple of minutes he had turned around and given his baby mom a dressing down in public about how she was handling their son. i moved into the next aisle, and he came around the other end toward me. he was so loud and obnoxious. i looked up over the product label i was reading and stared at him. he sneered and laughed at me. i can’t tell you how much i want to fight with this guy. ‘0 to to fuck off’ in a few minutes.
nothing wrong with my douchebag detector. just thinking about it raises my blood pressure. i need to get back to neurofeedback (like most things, it’s only allergies keeping me away. who brings their dog to work in a medical office, anyway!?)
truthspeak, sorry to hear your situation. what a loser.
I don’t think your divorce attorney is the sort of person you need on your side. I would find someone who deals specifically with fraud.
I don’t know what the laws are where you live, but hope that you do have recourse with the bank (and who told you you didn’t?)
You don’t sound paranoid at all….just spathed. I wish you the best with this process. Go after him if you can – losing spousal ‘support’ sounds like a good deal. 😉
One/joy, thank you for your encouragement – I want my money from the bank and THEY can pursue the exspath.
The way things are looking, the spousal support will be very short-lived. I’ve mentioned in other posts that he has probably made over 25K in 6 months, and probably 800 of that went to financial obligations. He is socking away CASH and he means to quit his job the moment the divorce is final, I believe. He’s already received written Admin. warning of his attendance, and he has never hidden his desire to leave his job.
SO…..”spousal support” is good on paper, but it sure as HECK isn’t going to mean anything if he chooses to quit his job.
He has earned a stretch in a Federal penitentiary, and I don’t feel one bit bad about it like I did a while back. The person that I loved, cared about, encouraged, and supported did not EVER exist, so what’s left? Someone that I didn’t really know. A stranger. A predator. A con.
And, One/joy, thank you about the encouragement with regard to what must appear to be paranoia!!! I have NO doubt that, rather than deal with a divorce, burying a spouse would have been far, far cheaper and more profitable for him in the long run.
truthspeak, i will be checking in with a lawyer this year about suing my father re the inheritance that was ‘tied up in real estate’. I know it looked good to the lawyer 4 years ago – don’t know if it still will…but i had to wait until i understood what my father was, and what he had done to me, his daughter.
i suspect he will squander everything before he dies and i will never recoup what he has stolen if i sit and wait and be the polite effing daughter. so, i too choose, to forgo what looks like the ‘normal’, ‘sensible’ thing one would do if they were not dealing with the disordered, and sue.
it’s hard – learning to believe in our guts, what has been shown to us to be true, and to believe that we are worth the fight (when we have the resources to do it); and in fact that in taking on the endevour, we stand in our truth. i can think of no stronger message of self affirmation. it is a journey so important and real, that it can set us free if we use it as wisely as we can.
Have you checked with the district attorney about charging him with FRAUD? Forging a signature is FRAUD and illegal, so possibly you could do something along that line. I wouldn’t give up yet on it.
((((hugs))))
I have been an avid LF reader for 3 years now. I typically do not post but am very thankful for everyone else’s posts. We all share similar experiences and just knowing that I am not alone is priceless.
My journey with the sociopath is not unique. I met him, we fell “in love” and it lasted for about 3 years. about 1 year into the relationship I started questioning him and some of his stories, but could never quite prove anything. I started some digging and found some proof that he is not what he says he is. He claims to have multiple degrees from reputable universities. All are fake because I contacted the universities and he was so stupid that some of things he supposedly majored in don’t even exist. He claims to be a certified personal trainer, a certified life coach and a bunch of other BS. So as of December 2012 I started NC and all was good, my healing had begun.
2 weeks ago, one of his victims contacted me through a mutual friend. I did not know of this girl, but her experience has got me fired up and what he did to her. I think there may be some legal action here, so this is where I turn to the LF community for advice.
This woman was going through a rough time in her life and a good friend of hers, a male, suggested she see the sociopath as a life coach because he really helped her friend through a difficult time. So she went to him and for the first month he was good to her, but then it started to change, he started to flirt with her, he would play mind games and finally he told her that if she fired him as her life coach they could began a relationship. So she fired him and a relationship began. It wasn’t soon after that the sociopath’s true color started to show. He played with her mind even more, remember that she was going through a rough time and was very vulnerable, and she fell for him hook, line and sinker.
When she contacted me 2 weeks ago, she was to point of suicide because not only did he mess with her, but messed with her marriage. He is a fraud from the get go and the fact that he is acting as a life coach and preying on his victims is wrong. He did not take that approach with me, so I have no legal action, but he did it to my friend and I know there are others. So any advice on how she can proceed? She is not even sure where to start and neither am I.
BTW, since December the sociopath awarded himself not 1 but 2 pHd’s and now calls himself Dr.
“Life coach” in my opinion is “UNlicensed therapist” and if he is posing as a “doctor” there may be some law that he’s breaking so I would have her contact the local district attorney’s office and/or the police. She might also see an attorney about suing him, but my guess is even if she got a “judgment” she wouldn’t be able to collect a dime.
Holly, I am so glad YOU got out. The other victim, it seems to me, is out, too.
What first struck me, as I read your post, was the profile of an eraser killer. You know, the guy who creates an entire persona, and when it starts to come to light that he’s a fraud, he is willing to kill, to keep his false self in place….Scott Peterson, is one….somebody entwhistle is another, and, also that guy who had his wife believing he was accepted into a prestigious medical school….when, in fact he hadn’t even been enrolled in college, hadn’t earned any degree in anything.
I’m going to see if I can find an article to post about this “profile”.
Again, I am so glad you’re out.