Dear Mr. or Ms. Esquire,
When a client tells you his or her opponent is a sociopath, please be aware of the ramifications for your legal case.
First of all, do not disregard the statement just because the opponent hasn’t killed anyone. A common perception is that sociopaths (people who have antisocial, narcissistic, borderline, histrionic or psychopathic personality disorders) are all deranged serial killers. This is not true—only a small percentage of sociopaths commit murder. But all sociopaths are social predators, and live by exploiting others.
Frequently this is financial exploitation—many sociopaths are skilled con artists—but not always. Sociopaths also target people who can provide them with a place to live, business connections, sex, housekeeping or other support services, children, or a respectable image in the community while they live double lives. The point is that sociopaths intentionally use manipulation and deceit to hook their target. They continue the manipulation and deceit to keep the exploitation going, bleeding the target until there is nothing left. At that point, some sociopaths abandon the target, moving on without a backward glance.
Sometimes, however, the target gets wise to the sociopath, and wants to end the involvement. At this point, some sociopaths become enraged at the possibility of losing control, and set out to crush the target. They are not interested in compromise or equitable distribution. They do not want to give the target whatever he or she is entitled to. They want to grind the target into the dirt.
What you need to understand about sociopaths
1. A sociopath’s prime objective is power and control. All they want is to win.
2. Sociopaths love the drama of court because it gives them an opportunity to win. They do not consider the possibility that they may lose. If they do lose, they view it a bump in the road, and figure out how to attack the target again. Forcing the target to incur steadily mounting legal expenses is considered a win.
3. Sociopaths lie. They lie convincingly. They have no qualms about lying in court documents or on the witness stand.
4. Sociopaths manipulate other people to lie for them. These witnesses may not know they are lying—they may simply believe everything that the sociopath has told them, because sociopaths are so convincing.
5. Sociopaths feel no obligation to follow court orders or the law. They only follow court orders or the law if they perceive an advantage in doing so. But they are experts at figuring out ways to use the law to further their objective, which is to crush your client.
How people become targets
Most of us believe that people are basically good inside and everybody just wants to be loved. Because we do not know that there are exceptions to these beliefs—namely, sociopaths—we have huge blind spots that these predators can exploit.
No normal person intentionally becomes involved with a lying, manipulative sociopath. So when your client tells you outrageous stories of the sociopath’s behavior, and also says he or she never knew about the behavior, or accepted the sociopath’s explanations, your client is most likely telling the truth.
How do these entanglements happen? Sociopaths are always on the lookout for people they can use. When they encounter someone through any social interaction, they quickly evaluate whether that person has something that they want. If the answer is yes, they assess the person for vulnerabilities. Then they figure out how to exploit the person’s vulnerabilities to achieve their objective.
Sociopaths engage in calculated seduction. If you’re handling a divorce case, the seduction was romantic. If it’s some other type of case, the seduction may have involved shared beliefs, aspirations or goals. Either way, in the beginning of the involvement the target is subject to a wonderful honeymoon of admiration and promise.
Once the target is hooked, the sociopath begins the exploitation, while simultaneously ramping up manipulation to keep the target under control. This may involve:
- Isolating the target from his or her support network
- Emotional, psychological, verbal, physical, sexual or financial abuse
- Gaslighting—making the target doubt his or her own perceptions
What you need to understand about the target
1. Involvement with a sociopath is like living in a black hole of chaos. Your client, the target, has probably had every aspect of his or her life disrupted:
- Career interrupted
- Finances ruined
- Health compromised
- Home and property neglected
- Relationships shattered
By the time the legal action commenced, your client may have already been in free fall for a long time. He or she may feel overwhelmed by the magnitude of the issues that need to be addressed.
2. Involvement with a sociopath can cause post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). At one time PTSD was diagnosed only in relation to a single traumatic event that involved risk of serious injury or death, coupled with intense fear, horror or helplessness. A new definition identifies a type of PTSD — complex PTSD — that results from cumulative trauma and long-term injury.
3. PTSD is a psychiatric injury (not a mental illness). PTSD causes biochemical changes in the brain and affects certain areas of the brain’s anatomy. Common symptoms include intrusive thoughts, nightmares, flashbacks, difficulty concentrating and exhaustion.
4. The litigation against the sociopath makes your client re-experience the underlying trauma and triggers the symptoms of PTSD. Dr. Karin Huffer, in her book Unlocking Justice, explains what happens:
Mentally reliving the trauma during legal proceedings simultaneously activates parts of the brain that support intense emotions while diminishing the functions of the central nervous system that controls motor output, regulates physiological arousal, and impedes the ability to communicate in words. Memory fails and intrusive emotions sabotage concentration on the task at hand. Litigants feel incapable of the spontaneous verbal response and interaction required in typical courtroom exchanges. As a result, the litigant with PTSD might be driven to avoid topics. They literally do not hear them. They disconnect when they need to engage. And, at times, they clearly are nonfunctional and are unable to communicate their symptoms and needs in a formal manner accepted by the courts.
5. Targets of sociopaths have been deceived, betrayed and perhaps subjected to violence. They approach the courts expecting justice, which sociopaths actively thwart. When justice is denied, and targets instead experience profound and prolonged injustice, their PTSD takes on another dimension, which Huffer identifies as “Legal Abuse Syndrome.”
Your client’s experience
The goal of this letter, Mr. or Ms. Esquire, is to help you understand what your client has experienced. My objective is to explain why he or she may be having difficulties with the litigation process, and difficulties moving on in life. The sociopath intentionally used your client—perhaps for years—and may be intentionally attempting to destroy him or her now.
Your client is not irrational, lazy or obstinate. Your client is having a normal reaction to profound betrayal.
Sincerely,
Donna Andersen
Author, Lovefraud.com, and a former litigant against a sociopath
Great article. Clear, succinct and validating! I would add that attorneys who represent spaths should beware also, because they are master’s at getting even attorneys to feel sorry for them and then getting the attorney to do unethical/illegal actions that could get the attorney into trouble. If they can get their own attorney to cross legal and ethical lines — what great thrill and power to dominate even their own attorney. They also thrive on attention as well as the drama — it is also how they manipulate!!!
so next, how about a similar article for therapists — most of whom are targets for spaths –and because most therapists don’t “get it” — it doesn’t even occur to them what may be going on — they can do a lot of harm to family members who seek help! Thanks for this great article!
Mary,
Prison counselors need an article of their own too. I have a transcript from a sentencing hearing where the prison counselors gave over-the-top reviews of what a wonderful prisoner the person who stalked me is. When cross examined by the county attorney one of them admitted that he met with the stalker for less than an hour. The female counselor who worked with him, but not much longer than the male one, talked like she had a crush on him. They were both very obviously charmed and manipulated by him.
Many lawyers really don’t care about their clients and actually use an opposing side’s mental illness to generate more income for themselves. I hate to sound cynical but it’s true that lawyers generate income by whipping up fear and can easily use the opposing side’s mental illness to their own benefit.
The court system’s all about money, not justice at all. It’s just a highly rigged game with insiders covering for themselves. You need to know that there are many ill sadistic personalities in the court system and to stay away if possible. Judges who sit on the bench can easily be psychopaths as well since they are attracted to their position of power and judgment over others.
Lawyers are taught in law school and by their firms not to form emotional bonds with their clients for fear of being manipulated by them not to follow the law or procedures as they should. Consider this as well that lawyers know if there’s a problem judge they must act towards them accordingly not based on what their client wishes for them to do but what they need to do based on particular circumstances.
The victim needs to find a decent human being to represent them if possible but I beg to differ that many would care or evaluate the opposing side’s psychopathology. Courts actually like the mentally ill who they use to generate income for their business operation. It’s gotten that bad in our judicial system.
If you can find a Christian lawyer I’d highly recommend someone who has demonstrated clear ethical and moral values in their history. Just realize anytime you get ensnared in the system, it’s Satan’s territory where psychopaths can easily thrive.
P.S. The court system doesn’t determine someone’s mental state of being a psychopath unless they have committed a crime requiring a psychological evaluation. Even when there’s obvious signs of the opposing side being a psychopath, the court will ignore it or not seek to recognize any psychological state since everything is viewed through and by the law in your case. The law sees no legal requirement to analyze the opposing party as being a psychopath unless he or she has been involved in a crime against the victim.
Silentstorm your advice is absolutely spot on regarding finding a decent person to represent you. My attorney saved my sanity by never lowering her own dignity to address the insults, financial fraud and threats perpetrated by my ex and his attorney. I too did not have the children’s custody at stake or I truely would have lost it!!!! As it stands I have maintained my dignity and my truth. lost out big time financially….but that seems inevitable given who we were married to. Ladies and the men who have been hurt…the most important thing is to be less rather than further traumatised during legal proceedings. No amout of struggle is going to get you more…remember liars lie and cheaters cheat.Its what they do and who they are. We don’t want to go there.
I am constantly in awe of the info provided on this site. By Donna herself and then the tribe of people whose lives have been affected by the LoveFrauder’s.
My story is too long and unsettling to get into – however, it wasn’t until after I had asked for the divorce that all the craziness made sense. I stumbled across this site while looking online for info on social misfits and then I read all about the toxic brew of sociopathic behavior. Then my ‘crazy’ marriage to him ALL made sense.
Thank you to the many out there who give both vocal and silent support and for the many of us who feel safe having a voice. So many in our lives don’t really understand what we went through, and i am actually kinda grateful for that as they don’t need to go to that dark place of trying to digest this disorder. It’s not for the weak of heart!
Blessings to you all. I am incredibly at peace and have joy in my soul again for the first time in many years.
DonnaC,
You’re right – having a spath in your life is “not for the weak of heart.” We all have crazy stories – I personally think that these people are insane. My kids’ dad (who’s in his mid-50’s) has not been the greatest role model (especially during the past several years) to his children, hearing from me about that! It’s in one ear and out the other, tuning me out. Oh, well, at least I’ve spoken my mind to him.
Donna, sometimes its good to write out your crazy story. I was so reluctant at first, and when I first posted it I re-read it questioning myself to people on here if I was the sociopath! Or if I was the one that’s crazy!! I truly was so brainwashed and trauma bonded at the time (back in November) and I was waiting for someone to tell me I was off my rocker! But the exact opposite happened and people here quickly tuned me into what was going on. I thought I was making excuses by “labeling” him a spath to cover for all of the “craziness” I was seeking answers and the response I got was UNREAL and the things I read were so SPOT ON to how my spath was, and I quickly learned that it was HIM and not ME! This site has been amazing to me to! Glad you’re here and don’t be afraid to share.
Serenity12,
I totally understand your disbelief at first and the shock later on when you realized that you were a victim and not the “crazy” person. For months I questioned my own sanity when I was involved with a sociopath. In my case, it was a woman, but there are far more men possibly who are.
They all, however, are after only one thing, and one thing only. They want to control your life in some way to make them feel better. My sociopath wanted as much money as she could fleece from me. After I had her arrested, I found out that I was only one of many other men, almost all of whom, were in similar situations as I was at the time. She preyed on us knowing exactly how to appeal to us in a way that we would do what she wanted us to do.
This site is Godsend to those of us who have been victims of these vicious people who prey on us. We can read others stories, Donna’s comments, and write out our own stories. All of these things help us each day to better live with ourselves. I was so down on myself as to why I let this woman control me the way she did. Why did I keep seeing her over and over even after I was sure she was not at all what she was telling me she was. I continually was determined to never even speak to her again after she would leave, or quit talking to me on the phone, but each time she came back, or called me, I was happy to see or talk to her again.
She was good at what she did. She had never worked a day in her life at an honest job, unlike some of the men who can appear normal to most people, but she had been manipulating men since some time during her junior high school days to get what she wanted out of them. Almost always older men, but occasionally men her age, or even younger.
Just never get down on yourself; you were a “victim” like the rest of us on here. It doesn’t feel good to know we allowed someone so ruthless to do what they did to us, but at least we can understand that it was them, not us, who was abnormal. We were all pretty much honest, decent and very trusting people who were taken advantage of because we were those things. You are not alone; there are more of us than anyone knows. Just be happy you are no longer associated with him. Best wishes.
tnvictim, your sociopath sounds like mine. I’m in TN and I’m assuming you are too. Does her name start with an N?
I only wish we would have discovered this site years ago. It wasn’t until late last year we became familiar with term sociopath, now a lot of things we couldn’t understand make sense. My husband and I could never understand how his ex, with whom he shares a child, could be so evil and heartless. We often asked ourselves, how can a mother behave this way? My husband has spent pretty much the last 18 years in and out of court. It started off with visitation, she never followed any of the courts orders and even tried convincing them my husband was an aggressive abusive man, and sadly people did believe her. There was so much drama and chaos on a regular basis looking back I don’t know how our marriage survived it. She married another man and tried to cut my husband completely out of the picture brainwashing the child to believe this man was his dad. When she divorced the other man, and I might add, took him to the cleaners. She decided to give up the child, at first he was with the “other dad”, then he came to live with us, but at this point he was 14 and we were the enemy so it only lasted a little over a year. My husband still goes to court but now it’s all about the money. Last year the child moved out my husband stopped paying support and a judge actually ordered him to pay 13000.00 back to her because she lied to the judge and got the child to sign a statement lying as well. There is nothing she isn’t willing to do or say. The saddest part in all this is that the child says he hates my husband and wants nothing to do with him. As heartbreaking as it is for my husband to accept, his son seems to be following the same path as his mother and whenever he gets a chance he tries to hurt my husband. It has been an exhausting journey never knowing what to expect next from her, we have now moved thousands of miles away to get some peace but I know my husband is full of guilt about his son. It’s really sad how people like this go through life thriving off making others miserable.
prs73,
I am so sorry to read what you and your husband have been put through!It’s good that you’ve finally put some distance between you and “the situation”.
Your husband has nothing to feel guilty about!He is a victim of sociopathy,just as the rest of us are.We’re here to gain an understanding of it,so that we can salvage what is left of our lives and make the best of it!Although the “ideal” situation between a parent and child is a loving bond,that isn’t possible with sociopathy.But the two of you deserve to be happy.Best wishes!
Thanks for your comments, that’s why I find this website to be a great help to us, people here understand, I have found that unless you are involved with a sociopath it’s almost hard to believe the crazy stories of things they do, some days it was unbelievable even for us. We have 2 children together and my husband is a wonderful, loving father, I try to remind him there was nothing more he could have done to prevent what happened with him and his son, she was just too strong of an evil force. With the information we have gained about sociopathy and the support I feel from this website, even though these are my first comments I have been reading for a few months now, it really does make a difference to how you can handle what’s being thrown at you.
prs73 – Welcome to Lovefraud. I am so sorry for your heartbreaking story. The key is understanding that the woman is disordered on a very basic level and her objective from the very beginning was probably to bleed your husband for money. It sounds like the son is an adult now – as hard as it is to accept, there probably is nothing that can be done anymore.
Believe it or not after I posted this I checked the mail and my husband has received another summons to appear in court for more child support, this time she even added a letter talking about how my husband has abandoned this child and hasn’t been there for him emotionally. A letter full of lies submitted in the court documents making them out to be the victims and my husband, a heartless father who doesn’t care about his child. This child will soon be 18 and considered an adult, but since he doesn’t attend school often he will more than likely be a student for as long as they can use the system and keep the money rolling in. I am feeling even more grateful this court info was posted here. Thanks Donna.
Thank you so much for this article. It hits home because I am currently battling in court with a sociopath for custody of my daughter. The lies he tells are so convincing that I sometimes even doubt myself and I feel that my lawyer might even start to doubt my character also. It is good to get a proper insight into the minds of these people because I would not feel so frustrated anymore. I see it as a mental illness for which he requires a great deal of help. My approach is not to say too much to him directly and to not let him see how his lies affect me. Thanks again!
kaylaabby – welcome to Lovefraud. I am sorry that you are dealing with a sociopath in court. One thing you truly need to understand – there is no therapy, no rehabilitation for this disorder. Your husband will not change – he has no desire to change, and probably considers himself to be superior just the way he is.
I was absolutely amazed by this letter, I read it over 20 times. I emailed it to my therapist, and all he could say was “WOW”.
I my case the spath was the person I was married to (I refuse to use the term husband, as we had no marriage in ANY sense of the word since 1986). Divorce was out of the question because of his threats.
My spath was a lawyer and I did not know about the fraud, forgery, and lies he told my mother’s stock broker until the he (the spath) died. He was, as I was to find out, an expert in creating false documents. Of course the brokerage swallowed everything the spath told them as gospel. Very long involved story. My mother’s name was the ONLY name that appeared on the account, but the broker saw no reason to contact her.
The litigation to get my severely handicapped mother’s money back was a nightmare, no worse.
When I explained what happened to various lawyers to try to get representation, I was turned down by lawyer after lawyer.
The arbitration (cases against brokerages go before a FINRA board) last 6 and a half days and the legal costs were just shy of a half million dollars.
While I won, I got way shy of the 1.3 million that the spath stole, no not stole, that the brokerage gave him control of.
A naive and self arrogant stock broker and a brilliant spath led to a disaster beyond belief.
If you think fighting a live spaht in overwhelming , try fighting a dead one.
What the spath did with the money is a book/movie.
The spath not only conned the broker, he conned a long practicing psycho analyst, and 2 communities of very street wise people; not to mention many others in the real world.
I am in the process of writing Donna a condensed version of my story. It’s hard.
Hugs to you all.
Omg….I feel for you so much “lost everything”, knowing what I was subjected to with my s’path Lawyers after getting out of a 25yr marriage to a Physcopath.
The position of power & control that these Lawyers hold cannot be underestimated. Some are sadly predators themselves who prey on the vulnerable women they are meant to help and poor you, married one.
My ex thought he was above the Law and is not answerable to anyone…..so did my Lawyers. I am so glad you were vindicated & won your case. God bless you and good luck for the future.
Dear Donna,
This open letter should be sent to all family Lawyers, it is nothing short of brilliant & so true.
I had a shocking court battle for nearly 2 years that has only recently ended with my Physcopathic ex. He put us in court & thankfully, our children were old enough that there were no custody battles. We were together over 25 yrs.
I stressed to my Lawyers how much of a s’path my ex was & that I really did not want to go into a court battle with him. My Lawyers however had an agenda to get us into the court system so they could make money off an already vulnerable & extremely distressed woman. They deliberately held a file I had provided to them at their office & gave every excuse under the sun as to why they hadn’t forwarded it onto my ex. There were phone calls made without my knowledge between my Lawyer & his & threats were made by them to start litigation if my file was not handed over immediately.
Despite the fact that the file had been sitting in their offices for over 6 weeks, they still didn’t react to the other sides threat to commence court proceedings if the file was not handed over to the ex. I spent months getting that file ready. I was not told of the threatening phone call to litigate, the first I knew of it & a letter that had gone out was after I received a bill from the Lawyers, nearly a month after the event. Meanwhile my ex had already commenced court proceedings.
I now fully believe that this Law firm knew full well that I was vulnerable & dealing with a Physcopath that they in turn, deliberately held an important file of documents from my ex (even though I had painstakingly provided it to their office)just so they could make money off our court battle because they knew this personality typeI was dealing with, would definately put us into the court system if he wasn’t given what he was demanding. And he did. My Lawyers then told me it was quote “a good thing” he had lodged court documents because they now had his affidavit & financial statement so they knew what they were dealing with.
It went from bad to worse after that. The court case went on for over 18 months. I had a breakdown. I now suffer from severe depression & extreme anxiety and was unable to even attend court (like you say in your letter) as my health was so unstable. So not only had I been used and abused by a Physcopath for over 25yrs, I then had horriffic Lawyers to deal with on top.
One of the Lawyers at this practice actually even asked me why my case ended up in the court system (when it was thrown in her lap when my Lawyer took leave) as she was just as shocked as me that it ended up in court. It was all over a binder not being supplied by the date my ex demanded it, even though it was in their office the whole time. Lawyers are in a position of power and control and should be helping the vulnerable women they represent & especially listening to them if they say they were married to a Physcopath.
My Lawyers instead used & abused me further by taking advantage of my extremely vulnerable position & emotionaly instability at the time. Has anyone else had to endure such a horrific experience with their Lawyers after first suffering at the hands of a s’path then being done over by the Lawyers as well?
My case with the ex has settled but at the expense of my already fragile emotional health after a lifetime of abuse at the hands of a s’path, I ended up dealing with more “snakes in suits” who were just as bad as my ex. This open letter to Lawyers really struck a cord with me and was so true in my case…..I’m so thankful you wrote this and brought light to the subject.
This post has helped me immensely and I thank you for that Donna.
Has anyone else had their Lawyers disregard the importance of knowing you are dealing with a s’path or worse still, taken advantage of that fact so they can make money off your misery?
I’m so thankful I have found this website…..and to everyone who shares their experiences because it helps others to hear you are not alone in this. Thank you Donna, I am buying books right now (yours included) to aide in my recovery back to normality.
God bless all of you who are dealing with s’paths in your life right now…stay strong.
Insight,
My attorney actually used the term “attorney whore” in a conversation with me after a three year civil case, admitting that they are all attorney whores at times. There were times during the case that I wondered if he wanted it to go to trial for his own financial gain, but I’ll never know for sure.
I wanted to attempt what’s called a summary judgment, which if granted, would have avoided going to trial. My attorney said they are very rarely granted and it could end up being money spent only to be turned down and go to trial anyway. I still wonder if I should have tried it. The two day trial at $170 per hour was a lot of money.
I do know that my attorney has a new understanding of how psychopaths operate due to my case. I could tell he didn’t have much understanding of victimization in the beginning, but he knows all about that now too, since the person who sued me was also stalking me during that time.
After the second day of the civil trial my attorney commented that he lost all objectivity in my case, which means that they do try not to get emotionally involved with the cases they deal with, but it got to him.
The book Without Conscience is a good one for understanding psychopaths from a doctor’s perpective. Some law enforcement officials thought the stalker had bi-polar disorder, but the description didn’t fit. When I read the book and this web site I knew exactly what was behind his behavior.
I’m glad you are recovering and found this web site. Take care and stay strong!
Insight – I am so sorry to hear of the horrific exploitation by your lawyers. Unfortunately, I doubt that sending the open letter to them would have done any good.
As one reader pointed out in an email to me – this open letter assumes that the lawyer is not a sociopath as well. Unfortunately, there are many, many lawyers who are just as exploitative and controlling as the sociopaths. And, it seems that sociopaths are very good at finding sociopathic lawyers. That makes the court battles even worse.