Custody cases are often referred to as “custody battles”. Lately when I hear this term, I have to chuckle to myself because a “battle” seems so mild and finite compared to what I have been dealing with since the night I fled my ex’s house with my newborn son.
A “battle” might be an appropriate title when the case is between two rational parents. If you are dealing with a sociopath in a child custody case, however, you are probably experiencing what feels more like a war. Some battles are won and some are lost, but it is never just ONE battle with a person like this. I am blessed to be able to share my war stories in hopes to give others ammunition that I didn’t have (and maybe even gather some tips/weapons from others who have been here before me).
My story begins…
The first time I walked into my lawyers office, I probably looked like a crazy woman (and to some degree that is how I felt). I still remember the black sweat pajamas and spit up stained shirt I was wearing that day. These were the only clothes I owned because they had been the ones I fled Lucifer’s house wearing (Lucifer is what I am calling the psychopath – Luc for short). My two week old son was in my arms, despair and fear were the written all over my face, and I was visibly shaking as I held out my hand to meet my new attorneys.
As I sat in their office and told my story, I felt their judgement and disbelief. They had seen so many scorned women come through their office with false accusations and unbelievable stories. To them, I was just another one of these women who was determined to get some sort of revenge on her ex. It took me nearly a year to convince them that we were not dealing with a normal and healthy man. That, in fact, we were dealing with someone who very likely had a dangerous personality disorder – a sociopath.
A little background:
Just a few short weeks after my son was born, Lucifer’s mask fell. After he threatened to kill me, me and baby boy fled the house and never looked back. In the weeks that followed that horrible night, I learned more about Luc than I knew about him in the whole two years we dated. What I learned was very disturbing and, frankly, continues to scare the hell out of me. I learned he had lied to me about everything from his name and age to how he made his money. I also learned that two of the most important women in his life died of unnatural causes. While a lot of terrible things seem to happen around Luc, he has yet to be convicted of any crimes.
Things I have learned from my Custody War:
- Family court is not about what is best for the child. It is only about dealing with parents. Every time I hear people talk about “father’s rights” and “two parents are better than one” I want to throw up. Again, these might be totally justified ideas when the father is not a sociopath. Family court is “one size fits all”. Judges are not interested in making sure the child is safe and healthy. They are only interested in making parents happy enough so they don’t have to deal with the case again.
- Sociopaths are very good at finding people who will lie for them. This includes professionals. Luc actually found a psychologist to take the stand for him and testify that while he was at risk for a mood disorder and “socially maladaptive”, she didn’t have any concerns about him. She said all of this after learning that he had lied to her about previously receiving a psych exam and about what he did for a living (among other things).
- The courts don’t recognize psychological abuse as abuse. After only a few months of supervised visits, the judge awarded Luc unsupervised visitation with my non verbal baby boy. The judge stated that unless baby boy was returned with cigarette burns on his back, the threshold for abuse would not be met. He noted that he didn’t think Luc was a good guy, however, unless Luc was arrested, he would be allowed unsupervised visits with baby boy.
- No matter how many mistakes a sociopath makes in family court, he will always be given the chance to try again. On the day of our initial trial, Luc showed up by himself with nobody to testify on his behalf and not a shred of evidence as to who he was. He believed that the mere fact that his sperm contributed to baby boy’s life was enough for him to be awarded at least joint custody. He wanted the court to make me pay him child support so that he could continue to sit at home and play video games all day. This behavior went on for several months. Luc even tried to get jurisdiction changed to his state after he had disappeared from baby boy’s life for three months without even a phone call. For a while, I felt like I was in court with Luc every other week. These trials were sport to him and he knew that the judge would keep giving him chances. He continued to drag out proceedings and not pay his attorneys, while I drained all of my resources trying to show the courts who his true motivation – money, power, and terror.
- Perjury might still be against the law, but don’t count on it being enforced. Luc is a pathological liar. Throughout the custody war, my lawyers were able to catch Luc in several lies. Let me just give you an example of one of the basic and most glaring lies Luc told to the court. About half way through the year, Luc’s age changed. The age he testified to at the original trial was false (even though he had managed to obtain an official drivers license with that fake age). When we were able to prove this lie through official Social Security and Department of Homeland Security records, he pretended as though he had never testified under oath to a different age. This ridiculousness continued throughout the custody war.
In the year since I left Luc, many people have questioned how I got myself into this situation. Here is the best answer I can come up with:
If you throw a frog into a pot of boiling water, he will jump out; however, if you put that frog in a pot of cold water and slowly bring it to a boil — before too long, you are going to have one dead frog. (In case it’s still not clear…I am the frog and Luc is the pot of boiling water)
The sad reality is that my war with Luc is far from over. Each day, I wake up wondering if I will end up like his older sons mother (in a grave). I have many days when I get discouraged by our terribly ignorant justice system. What is my silver lining, my ray of hope, and why I keep fighting? My baby boy. He is my guardian angel and the reason I wake up every day. I have been through a hell worse than I could ever have imagined in the last year, but I will do it all over again and for the rest of my life if I have to in order to save my son.
Cappuccinoqueen, I can type your ID this morning!
Thank you for your article. I cannot imagine the state of mind that you’ve been in through your experiences in and out of Court. Each note that you made with regard to your experiences are 100% accurate in every case that I’ve ever heard of. I have heard of 2 of thousands of custody cases that ended with a Judge actually recognizing what was going on, and taking steps to end it, safely, and reasonably.
Your baby may be the catalyst for your fight to live, recover, and survive, but YOU are your own guardian angel, my dear. You have enough smarts, enough guts, enough mettle, and enough “fight” in your soul to save yourself and your precious son.
I can honestly understand why parents flee with their children and go into hiding. I truly can. I see it as the only solution in most cases where there is an obvious lethal risk. I don’t fault these terrified parents for taking whatever steps that they must to provide safety for their children and themselves. In this, the entire system is truly and utterly broken.
I offer my most sincere and brightest blessings of protection, safety, and recovery.
Thanks so much Truthspeak! And yes, I am my own protector and I do have a lot of fight in me on my own. That being said, I call my son my guardian angel because before I knew who Luc really was, I truly believe that my son (and Luc’s belief that baby boy could somehow be how he would eventually get money out of me) was the only thing that kept me alive while I was living in Luc’s house. That baby boy saved my life because had it not been for him, I think Luc would have gotten rid of me while he had more access. Baby boy also helps me keep strong. I can be in the worst mood in the world and one smile for that little kid can turn me into the happiest person alive. For that, I am truly blessed. 🙂
Dear Cappucino Queen,
Hello. You have my utmost sympathy and admiration. Good for you. You escaped. You keep fighting, my dear.
You have the hardest road of all of us IMHO.
CappuccinoQueen, yes – a baby has the most intoxicating affect. They love without conditions.
Your sharing your experiences will not only be an inspiration to others, but they will also offer a true glimpse into how victims of sociopaths are treated through the Courts. My belief – my strong belief – is that these ugly truths need to be “taken to the streets,” and the entire system overhauled. From CPS/DFYS to Law Enforcement to the Psych Communities to the Justice Systems….it all needs a rabid shakedown and restructuring.
And, the saddest fact is that nobody “gets it” until they’ve been victimized, themselves. Suddenly, they “get it” and can identify with the horrors that they’ve heard tell of from other victims.
Brightest and most protective blessings
Cappucino Queen,
Thank you for sharing your experiences. I’ve read so many nightmarish child custody situations on this site and others and completely agree with you. The judges act in the best interest of the parents, and themselves. Seems like they try to appease each parent enough to keep them out of their courtroom.
In my custody case, I submitted a federal investigative report detailing Spathy’s embezzlement of federal grant monies, which included his self reported admission of long term drug abuse and his admission that he felt he could beat the system, etc. He was in jail when I went to court and submitted a letter to the court, with his sincere intentions to change for his daughter, blah, blah, blah.
I asked for termination of parental rights. I didn’t get that, but I got substaintal power to protect my daughter. It was a complete God shot that he was in jail, and thus unable to be present for his “grand performance.” He was granted 2x monthly supervised rights beginning at 1 year of age and ordered to pay $70/month in child support. He ended up demanding to see my daughter on her first birthday! It seemed like he wanted to take that special day from me. That didn’t happen. He wasn’t entitled to birthday or holiday visitation.
I would request the notes from visitations and wanted to hurl when I read about his “performance.” He would bring musical instruments and healthy snacks for the baby. When he could see her all day, every day before I left him, he couldn’t be bothered, unless it was after the sun had set and he couldn’t surf anymore. And then he’d want to wake her up to be on his schedule.
Anyway, I had been fortunate enough to have the judge agree to let me leave the state, with subsequent visitation to be mutually agreed upon and supervised at my discretion. I realized that with his peformance being as great as it was, that he could drag me back into court and demand and probably get more rights to my sweet girl. And then he started to show up around my work and her daycare, an hour away from where he lived. And my car kept turning up keyed. I wonder, who could have possibly done this? I ended up fleeing the state 3 months ago. My little one is 20 months old and occasionally says “Daddy away.” She told me “I love Daddy” for the first time the other day. She probably had so much fun with him on those visits, and I think the more she was exposed to him with all the charm he is capable of, the more likely she would be hurt and disappointed in the long run.
My ex has admitted to the murder of a man more than 15 years ago now. I reported what he told me and ended up going to give a formal, recorded statement to a detective. Evidently, he has already been investigated in this case. I think they know it’s him, but all they have to go on is the information he has bragged to other people about.
I love the analogy of the frog in cold water, which starts to boil! People don’t “get” how I ended up with someone this disordered and I try to explain that he didn’t lead with his embezzlement, violence, and drug use. He led with his business, his talents, his strong family ties, and his adoration of me during a vulnerable time in my life. I think people want to condemn those of us who experience socipathic betrayals as naive or stupid, because they don’t want to imagine the true magnitude of such a manipulative person and that they could fall victim to a similiar situation.
Anyway, I identified alot with your struggle and I hope you can find a way to escape Luc for your son’s sake. I could completely relate to your feelings about your son, I feel the same way about my little girl. The only advice I feel qualified to give is to do whatever it takes to protect yourself and that child. It sounds as though he is responsible for the deaths of two other women he was intimately involved with. I would run for the hills if you think you could escape him. The long term risk of him around you and your son is far too real, IMHO.
I’m glad you are with us here on LF, not glad you experienced sociopathic abuse, but that you found this site and can help and be helped here. Hugs to you!
LPMarie, good god in heaven……what a strong and courageous gal you are.
Cappuccino, I believe that you clearly understand your situation. IMHO, you’ve expressed incredible courage, strength, and resolve. Again….brightest blessing to you, LPMarie, and all other parents out there who are desperately protecting themselves and their children. Brightest, brightest blessings upon you all.
Capuccinoqueen and LPMarie,
You are both so strong and courageous. You are both doing the right thing for yourself and your babies!
I can relate in so many ways, and without getting into detail, I will say that keep having strength. I left my Psycho mid pregnancy after he broke my face and threatened to kill me, spent one week in jail and by the 3rd week after the incident he had a girl in my home, which started to harass me, as well as him and whoever friends they had. The stress caused me early labor yet my daughter survived. I then decided he was not to have any part in the baby’s life. I’d rather have mine and my daughter’s sanity than his money. I’d rather go a lifetime of not dealing with him than an 18 year nightmare. Luckily he has not looked for us (not that I know of) he has bothered some of my friends, and an occasional email to try to provoke me. He finally saw his attempts are in vain to affect me. However, I do live in fear and I do live looking over my shoulder. I pray he stays away. I can’t imagine the hell you face with the justice system. Your guardian angel, your son, will be your peace. The hell I go through now is only money, but in a weird way I find comfort in knowing that I am not the only person suffering financially in such trying economic times. I never post on Lovefraud, but I always read the blogs. This is one of the places that helped me through my difficult times. Today seemed like a good day to post because after 3 years, I feel almost normal again. I may post in the future again, but to the readers and writers on here, Thank You.
Dear WhyOWellWhy,
hello, welcome and bless you for having the guts to post your thoughts and experiences. Your story reminded me of myself. I was more fortunate in that I never lived with my daughters ex and wasn’t brutalised in that way. She, my daughter is 26 now and has wondered why and asked questions but she’s never sought him out despite being inquisitive. Yes I was lucky like you. He let us go and only created small ripples compared to what some good people here have endured.
I’m glad you feel normal again. Good for you. Keep on keeping on. It takes guts and courage to support yourself.
Whyohwellwhy, thank you for sharing your experiences. And, it’s so good to read that someone is beginning to feel “normal.” I look forward to the day when I can take some time, relax, and “feel” something other than drama.
Brightest blessings to you