- Posted August 17, 2016
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Political Âcorrectness v. due process
Dear Mr. Brock,
I have just read your article "False Allegations of Sexual Abuse, What Can Be Done?" (http://truthinjustice. org/false-allegations.htm) and I'm in shock. You have outlined in this article a pattern that we have witnessed firsthand in the case of my boyfriend, who sits in a maximum security prison with a harsh 35 year sentence on bogus molestation charges against his own daughter (who was age 3 at the time of the allegation). Dad was never married to the birth mother, and in fact they lived in different states.
This nightmare began in 2011 when the false allegation was made just three days after a court ordered counselor had reinstated full visitation of the [the child] with her father, determining that it was in the best interest of the child and that he was no threat to her in any way. (The birth mother had previously suspended visitation because she claimed the child had anxiety around Dad...the counselor determined that her anxiety was not specific to her father and that it was best for them to resume visitation.)
The child's birth mother and new husband had been attempting to alienate Dad from [the child]'s life for two years and finally used a false allegation to accomplish their goal. After awaiting trial for three years, during which time the child was being coached by a state counselor, Dad's conviction came in February 2014. Professional misconduct of the female detective assigned to the case, who was working with prosecutors, along with incompetent defense counsel contributed to the false conviction. There was withholding of exculpatory evidence by prosecuting attorneys and 22 months of inappropriate interviewing tactics (coaching) with [the child]. In fact, in a similar case, an expert is on the record criticizing these tactics of the same counselor that interviewed [the child]:
"Ms. Smith, an expert in the assessment and treatment of sexual behavior issues in children, testified before the family court. Ms. Smith reviewed the DSS files; the written reports from [the child's] sessions with [the therapist Ms. Jones]; the written reports and videos from [the child's] sessions with Ms. Jones; treatment records from [the child's] pediatricians; Father's polygraph results; interview reports and affidavits from Mother, Father, and Father's two daughters; and the GAL's reports. Ms. Smith disapproved of the therapist's interviewing techniques, specifically her continuing to have therapy sessions with the child about the sexual abuse allegations until a full assessment was conducted. Ms. Smith stated a child of this age is easily influenced, and repetitive sessions and questions about the allegations could inadvertently and inappropriately reinforce those allegations with the child. Ms. Smith also opined that Ms. Jones inappropriately led the child, and continued to repeat the same questions to the child until she was satisfied with the child's responses" (https://www.judicial.state.sc.us/opinions/HTMLFiles/COA/4891.htm).
Of course, there are many details of the case (too intricate and complicated to explain here), that were complete travesties of justice that would make most Americans wonder how it could ever happen in our justice system.
Dad is of course pursuing appeal but just had his conviction affirmed through direct appeal and must raise it to the State Supreme Court of Appeals before pushing it through as a PCR Appeal, which is really his best chance of a reversal of conviction due to the extreme negligence of his defense council in this case. All the while, he sits in a cage as a convicted child sex offender absolutely devastated and heartbroken over the losses. He's lost his parental rights to [the child], visitation with his other three children, his successful career, his belongings, his reputation and much more. His parents and sister are broken and exhausted from this experience.
I'm reaching out to you to see if you have any suggestions at this point that could help Dad and his family. If you can help us in any way by providing resources or guidance, it is most appreciated. I'm so thankful you are raising awareness of this particular type of injustice and I pray that it will help other families as well.
Please let me know if you need any other information and I hope to hear from you soon.
Thanks,
Candace
Dear Candace,
The article you cited was written many years-perhaps 20 years ago-and I still receive at least weekly letters like yours from people who say they have been wrongly convicted, or from loved ones who feel their loved ones have been wrongly convicted. Are they all innocent? I doubt it. But I believe a substantial number are because of my own experience handling these cases in the courts.
I write a monthly article for the Detroit Legal News. I wrote this one when I was doing some expert witness work regarding child custody recommendations and forensic interviews of children suspected of being sexually abused. I no longer do this work, but refer these cases to this organization:
National Child Abuse Defense and Resource Center
PO Box 638 Holland OH 43528
419-865-0513
Website: www.falseallegation.org
Email: NCADRC@aol.com
If anyone can help you, they should be able to. They will help you find lawyers and experts who testify in these cases and know what they are doing. I wish you well, but I am not optimistic. Unfortunately, these cases depend mostly on evidence provided by the child, and children can easily be coached by malicious parents or guardians. Once the child believes that he or she has been molested, there is little that can be done to convince the child, a jury, or a court otherwise. Moreover, there are rarely any penalties for making false allegations, so people keep doing it. It is like being able to go down into the street and shoot anyone you want with impunity.
And this is America, where in a sex abuse case you are "presumed guilty until proven innocent beyond all doubt," as one of my attorney friends likes to say. I am truly sorry for your situation, and for the many people who now sit in prison on false allegation charges. I also feel badly for the students who are being kicked out of college without any semblance of due process of law. But our presumptive next president has stated that, "Survivors of sexual abuse have a right to be believed." (https://www. youtube.com/watch?v=oz_2118MyH0)
I guess she means all except those who have been victimized by her husband. However, regardless of the allegations made by those who have been victimized by our next "First Man," the simple statement that someone claiming to be a victim deserves to be believed reverses the fundamental principle of due process of law that says the accused of any crime has a right to be presumed innocent.
These two statements are irreconcilable. You can have one or the other, but not both. Add to this that men on college campuses-the elite males of our society you might argue-are not even entitled to a court hearing, a trial by jury, the ability to present exculpatory evidences, or many other due process protections before being found guilty of rape and expelled from college, and you have the complete disregard of the foundations of law and American Democracy in favor of political correctness. (http://video.foxnews.com/ v/4711634737001/fox-news-reporting-the-truth-about-sex-amp-college/?#sp =show-clips)
This term-political correctness-is a polite way of saying a grab for absolute power by the feminists who now control the party that controls America. Their story of perpetual victimization by men in this country has been repeated so often that it is now believed by a large percentage of men as well as the majority of women in America, and perhaps the West. I heard a former Michigan governor and a speaker at the Democratic Convention make reference to our current "rape culture" on college campuses-a myth with no statistical basis-like it was established fact.
The result is the demonization of nearly half of the American population by the other half, who are more likely to vote and can therefore control the lawmaking and judicial processes of the entire country. If the judicial processes can't be sufficiently reshaped, they created quasi-judicial processes by executive edict with a lower burden of proof to get what they want.
I do not know what the end of this will be, but I fear for my country. A house divided against itself cannot stand, and democracy without protection for all of its citizens is not likely to endure. Moreover, I do not see any likely outcome of the political process that will change this trend of increasing inequity anytime soon.
Recently, I discussed this matter with a judge I used to do some work for in Family Court. He said that he thought I was right about the current situation, but that the balance of power had weighed in favor of men for the first two hundred years of this nation's history.
This is an argument I have heard often, but I don't believe it is a valid comparison. While it is true that men have held power, not only for the last two hundred years, but since the beginning of recorded history and probably before that, I don't believe that men have consistently used that power to demean women. It derived initially out of the need for women to bond with physically stronger males for protection, and evolved into separate and clearly defined roles. It was not a malicious conspiracy.
Alan Dershowitz, prominent scholar on United States constitutional and criminal law, and a leading defender of civil liberties, said recently in an interview that whereas intolerance used to be the province of the right, today it's coming mostly from the left and is premised on the notion that any ideas that counter the entrenched political correctness of the left should not be tolerated as they create an "unsafe space" on college campuses. He said that, "The fog of fascism is descending over America's universities," to the extent that free speech or an exchange of competing ideas is no longer acceptable. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpzD5E9GZXY).
Ultimately, it is now up to the fair minded of both sexes to decide if we will ever achieve a just and equitable society. To deny justice to men as the other and the oppressor, is to deny justice to the sons, fathers, husband's and brothers of all women. Ironically, when it comes to justice in the court, those most likely to be denied due process are not the well healed and well-connected like our future president's husband, but the poor and disproportionately black, examples of which I have written about in previously published articles called, "Presumed Innocent Until Proven Broke, Parts I and II" (http://legalnews.com/macomb/1375044 ; http://www.legalnews.com/detroit/1382843). This is a group about whose rights the left is ostensibly concerned, but apparently not when they conflict with the agenda of the true power brokers.
Is due process of law just a matter of deciding whose turn it is to be discriminated against, or is it about trying to establish a more just society? If the latter, that cannot be achieved by denying any group of citizens fair treatment under law.
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Michael G. Brock, MA, LLP, LMSW, is a forensic mental health professional in private practice at Counseling and Evaluation Services in Wyandotte, Michigan. He has worked in the mental health field since 1974, and has been in full-time private practice since 1985. The majority of his practice in recent years relates to driver license restoration and substance abuse evaluation. He may be contacted at Michael G. Brock, Counseling and Evaluation Services, 2514 Biddle, Wyandotte, 48192; 313-802-0863, fax/phone 734-692-1082; e-mail, michaelgbrock@ comcast.net; website, michaelgbrock.com.
Published: Wed, Aug 17, 2016
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