The primary person responsible
for the induction of a parental alienation syndrome (PAS) in a child is the litigating parent who hopes to gain leverage in a court of law by programming in the child a campaign of denigration directed against a target parent. In most cases alienated parents are relatively helpless to protect themselves from the indoctrinations and the destruction of what was once a good, loving bond. They turn to the courts for help and, in most cases in my experience, have suffered even greater frustration and despair because of the court’s
failure to meaningfully provide them with assistance. It is the purpose of this article to point out the judiciary’s deficiencies and even failures in this realm. It is the author’s hope that increasing recognition by the
judiciary of its failures to deal effectively with PAS families will play a role in the rectification of this serious problem.
BASIC INFORMATION ABOUT THE PAS
Definitions
The Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS) is a disorder that arises primarily in the context of child-custody
disputes. Although the litigants are most often the biological parents, the same disorder can arise with others who may be disputing custody of the child, e.g., a parent vs. stepparent, parent vs. grandparent, and parent vs. relative or family friend. The disorder’s primary manifestation is the child’s campaign of denigration against a parent, a campaign that has no justification because the target parent has always been a good, loving parent. The disorder results from the combination of a programming (brainwashing) parent’s indoctrinations
and the child’s own contributions to the vilification of the target parent. When true parental abuse and/or neglect is present, the child’s animosity may be justified, and so the parental alienation syndrome explanation for the child’s alienation is not applicable.
The alienating parent’s primary purpose for indoctrinating the child(ren)’s campaign of denigration
against the target parent is to gain leverage in the court of law. The programming parent believes that the more animosity the children profess against the target parent the greater the likelihood the judge will award primary custody to the alienator. It is important to note that the child’s alienation is less the result of bona fide animosity or even hatred of the alienated parent, but more a manifestation of the fear that if such acrimony is not exhibited, the alienating parent will reject the child.
PAS as a Form of Emotional Abuse
Indoctrinating a parental alienation syndrome into a child is a form of emotional abuse because
such programming result in the attenuation and even destruction of the child’s bond with a good, loving parent. Child abuse has been variously defined. The definition of child abuse utilized by the Senate (U.S. Senate, SB 577) states:
"Child abuse can be categorised
into four different types: neglect, emotional abuse, physical abuse and sexual abuse."
With regard to the subcategory
emotional abuse, ten examples are provided. Of these, seven applicable to the PAS child:
"conditional parenting, in which the level of care shown to a child is made contingent on his or her behaviours or actions"
In the PAS, the affection of the alienating parent is conditioned on the PAS child’s compliance with the programmed campaign of denigration and, in many cases, the ability to provide additional "ammunition" against the target parent. As mentioned, the PAS child’s love for the programmer has less to do with affection than fear of rejection if the child does not join in with the programmer against the alienated parent.
"emotional unavailability by the child’s parent/carer"
The PAS child knows that the alienating parent’s affection will be withdrawn if the child does not participate in the campaign of denigration.
"unresponsiveness, inconsistent or inappropriate expectations of a child"
PAS children become confused and highly anxious because they cannot rise to the challenge of the conflictual situation created by the PAS indoctrinations. It is unreasonable to ask a child to cooperate in a campaign of denigration, to do so consistently, and to do so without ambivalence (at least in the early stages). It produces in the child unnecessary confusion, tensions, and frustrations.
"premature imposition of responsibility on a child"
The child is asked to commit to memory a wide variety of indignities allegedly suffered at the hands of
the alienator. Sometimes the responsibility involves promulgating a false sex-abuse accusation. This is a common spin-off of the PAS. All these indoctrinations, and the expectation that the child will parrot them accurately, place heavy burdens on the PAS child.
"unrealistic or inappropriate expectations of a child’s capacity to understand something or to behave and
control himself in a certain way"
Often the child cannot understand the nature of the accusations, especially the sex-abuse accusation spin-off.
"under- or over-protection of a child"
PAS children are often overprotected. They are led to believe that any contact with the target parent
is dangerous. This can generalize to others. This results in the child becoming more fearful of venturing forth into the world beyond the home and more dependent on the programming parent. A vicious cycle then ensues with increasing dependency
on the child’s part and increasing overprotectivness on the alienating parent’s part.
"failure to show interest in, or provide age appropriate opportunities for, a child’s cognitive and
emotional development"
The exclusionary maneuvers deprive the child of the input that the target parent can provide to the
child’s cognitive and emotional development.
As can be seen, PAS satisfies seven of the ten examples of emotional abuse provided in this bill.
The Primary Symptoms of the PAS
The eight primary symptoms of the PAS are:
- The campaign of denigration
- Weak, frivolous, or absurd rationalizations
for the deprecation
- Lack of ambivalence
- the "independent thinker" phenomenon
- Reflexive support of the alienating
parent in the parental conflict
- Absence of guilt over cruelty to and/or
exploitation of the alienated parent
- The presence of borrowed scenarios
- Spread of the animosity to the extended
family and friends of the
alienated parent.
There are also three levels of parental
alienation syndrome: mild, moderate, and severe (Table 1). For the
purposes of this article, only a brief summary is warranted. Elsewhere,
I have presented full descriptions of these three levels (Gardner, 1992,
1998).
The Three Levels of PAS Children
In the mild level,
the alienation is relatively superficial, the children basically cooperate
with visitation, but are intermittently critical and disgruntled with the
victimized parent. In the moderate level, the alienation is more formidable,
the children are more disruptive and disrespectful, and the campaign of denigration
may be almost continual. In the severe level, visitation may be impossible
so hostile are the children, hostile even to the point of being physically
violent toward the allegedly hated parent. Other forms of acting-out may
be present, acting-out that is designed to inflict ongoing grief upon the
parent who is being visited. In some cases the children’s hostility may reach
paranoid levels, e.g., they exhibit delusions of persecution and/or fears
that they will be murdered. It is crucial that evaluators properly diagnose
the PAS level because each level requires a different psycho-
logical and legal approach (Tables 2 and 3).
The Three Levels of PAS Alienators
Whereas the diagnosis of
PAS is based upon the level of symptoms in the child, the court’s decision
for custodial transfer should be based primarily on the alienator’s
symptom level, and only secondarily on the child’s level of PAS symptoms.
The criteria I have found useful for assessing the alienator’s level are
to be found in Table 2. In the course of the evaluation, the evaluator
should attempt to assess how obsessed the alienating parent is with attempts
to exclude the victim parent from the child’s life. The evaluator should
also assess, to the degree possible, such areas as the frequency of the
programming process, the frequency of exclusionary maneuvers, and the
frequency of the violation of court orders. An assessment should be made
of the successes the alienator has had in manipulating the legal system
to enhance the programming. This is not usually difficult to do, because
the alienator can predictably rely on court delays, court reluctance,
and even court refusal to penalize the alienator via such measures as
posting a bond, fines, community service, probation, house arrest, incarceration
and custodial transfer that would prevent or interrupt further alienation.
Last, the evaluator should assess the risk of intensification of programming
if the alienator has gained primary custody.
THE JUDICIARY'S ROLE IN DEALING WITH PAS CHILDREN
When courts and mental
health professionals work together, there is a high likelihood of success
when dealing with PAS families. In contrast, if either attempts to deal with
these families separately their efforts are almost always doomed to failure.
The therapist does not have the power of the court, and the court does not
have the expertise of the mental health professional nor the opportunity
to work in depth on an ongoing basis with PAS families. The judge in the
courthouse is not available to reach out and deal with the details that are
crucial to attend to if one is to be helpful to PAS families. And attorneys,
although more available to their clients than judges, cannot deal with the
whole family, because they are ethically prohibited from having any direct
contact with their adversary’s client.
Mental health professionals
are basically impotent when it comes to requiring their patients to do
anything. They can analyze, help people gain insight, suggest and recommend,
but they have little if any power over their patients. It is through the
power of the judge—specifically by recommendations to the judge—that mental
health professionals have potential power, and it is through the
threat (I have no hesitation using the word) of reporting to the court
parents and youngsters who are not cooperating in the treatment program
that such power is wielded.
Court-ordered Therapy
Judges are quick to refer
PAS families into treatment. Therapy has been oversold to the public and
is far less efficient and effective than purported by most mental health
professionals. Research supporting this fact has been extensive and is
well known. Similarly, I suspect that most judges do not really have the
respect for therapy that they profess in the courtroom, but it can serve
as an ostensible if not expedient solution to the case. By ordering everyone
into therapy, judges can make a quick decision and then move on to the
next case.
Most PAS indoctrinators are not candidates for therapy. To be a proper candidate for meaningful therapy two provisos must be satisfied:
1) the individual has insight into the fact that he (she) has psychiatric
problems and 2) the individual is motivated to alleviate these problems.
PAS indoctrinators do not generally consider the programming of their
children to be a manifestation of a psychiatric problem. They do not appreciate
that poisoning a child against a loving parent is very much a form of
emotional abuse—especially because it can result in the destruction of
a strong bond between a child and a loving parent. PAS indoctrinators
do not satisfy the first proviso. Furthermore, without insight into the
fact that they have a psychiatric problem, they do not have the motivation
to change anything—especially in the realm of the PAS indoctrinational
process. Accordingly, the second proviso is also not satisfied.
My experience has been
that judges do not appreciate that they cannot really order someone
into meaningful treatment. I believe that judges often lose sight of the
fact that there are certain limits to what they can accomplish with their
orders. A judge can order a PAS indoctrinator to spend some time in a
room with a therapist who is naïve enough to take on such a patient, but
they cannot order the person to be motivated to change. Furthermore, most
PAS indoctrinators do not follow through with the judge’s order for therapy
anyway, from the recognition that the judge is not going to follow up
on it in the immediate future. Accordingly, they recognize that they can
ignore such an order with impunity. What happens then is that the PAS
indoctrinator continues to program the children, and the PAS becomes more
deeply entrenched in them.
The high incidence of PAS
families returning to court should impress judges that court-ordered therapy
for PAS indoctrinators just will not work. There must be some judges who
appreciate that therapy is at best a very soft science, and that the evidence
is very weak that most forms of psychotherapy are of any value at all. Yet
many continue to "believe in" therapy. One of the reasons for such blind
commitment is clear. It is an easy transference of responsibility to the
sea of "therapists" out there who are happy to take the patients’ money and
go through the motions of providing them with "treatment." Thus, the judges
are happy, the therapists are happy, and even the alienators are happy because
they know quite well that nothing will happen in the treatment, that time
is on their side, and that the alleged therapy will ensure many more months
and even years of opportunity for further programming. The only ones who
are not happy are the victim parents whose grief and frustration mount formidably
in the course of the "treatment."
Guidelines to the Court for Dealing with PAS Children
Table 3 provides what I consider
to be the optimum guidelines for the judiciary to follow in PAS cases. Again,
it is important to emphasize that the diagnosis of PAS is based upon the level
of symptoms in the child, whereas the court’s decision for custodial transfer
should be based primarily on the alienator’s symptom level and only secondarily
on the child’s level of PAS symptoms. It is to be noted that the legal approaches
take up much more space than the therapeutic. The reason for this is that the
legal approaches in Table 3 serve as the foundation for the therapeutic. Without
the court’s imposing proper restraints and restrictions on the alienating parent,
the therapist is helpless to accomplish anything therapeutic. The reader should
note that I recommend two plans of legal/therapeutic intervention in moderate
PAS cases.
In Plan A, primary custody can still remain with the alienating parent. I recommend
that the court appoint a therapist, but not just any therapist. The
therapist must be someone who is knowledgeable about the special techniques
necessary for the treatment of PAS children (Gardner, 1992, 1998, 2001a). Most
important are the warnings to the alienating parent that the court will impose
sanctions if there is any violation of the court’s orders regarding the children’s
visitation with the alienated parent. In Table 3 are six levels (a. to f.) of
recommended judicial action, all of which can be readily implemented by the
court, because an alienating parent who does not cooperate with a visitation
schedule is basically in contempt of court.
In Plan B, the alienator is
so relentless that the children must be transferred to the home of the alienated
parent if there is to be any hope for alleviation of PAS symtoms. Here, the
alienator is usually in the severe category and there is no evidence that they
will cease and decist from their exclusionary maneuvers following the trial.
The children, here are generally in the moderate level, but moving rapidly down
the track to the severe category. Again the court does well to appoint a therapist
knowledgable about the special techniques necessary for the treatment of PAS
families. This therapist must monitor an extremely restrictive visitation program,
contracted or expanded depending upon the relentlessnness of the alienator.
Also depicted in Table
3 are the measures that I recommend to courts when the alienator’s symptoms
are at the severe level and the children’s symptoms are in the moderate or
severe level. In such cases, the children may not be able to visit with the
alienated parent, so hostile are they. In fact, they might even be dangerous
to his (her) physical well-being. Accordingly, a transitional site program
must be implemented. As described in detail elsewhere (Gardner, 1998, 2001a),
this program requires strict restriction of the children’s access to the
alienator and gradual expansion of the children’s access to the alienated
parent—first in the transitional site, and then in the home of the alienated
parent.
The Ways in Which the Judiciary Fails to Deal Properly and Effectively
with PAS Families
I have been testifying
in PAS cases since the early 1980s. I have made recommendations along
these lines in many cases. I have been successful in getting courts to
change primary custody in some cases. But not once has a court
gone along with my recommendation to implement any of these six sanctions.
On occasion, a court will threaten to implement one of these measures
for getting alienating parents to comply with the court-ordered visitation
schedule, but not once have I been in a case when a court has actually
done so. Alienating parents know well that courts are not likely to come
down heavily upon them for violating a court-ordered visitation schedule.
Without such consequences, they continue to program the children. They
know well how to "work the system." They violate court-ordered visitation
schedules, and they know that they can most often do so with impunity.
They recognize that the courts are slow, and that time is on their side.
The longer they have access to the children, the more deeply entrenched
will become their PAS symptoms. Time is one of the PAS indoctrinator’s
most powerful weapons, and they know quite well that the courts
will predictably give them time, and more time, and more time.
This is the sequence I
have repeatedly seen: The PAS indoctrinator successfully alienates the
children. The alienated parent goes to court (the time gap between the
onset of the alienation and the court hearing may be as long as a year).
The trial drags on over a span of a few weeks or even a few months. The
court orders an evaluation (often the evaluator is someone who
may know little, if anything, about the PAS). The evaluation takes four-to-five
months. Five-to-six months later there is another court hearing, at which
point the judge orders therapy for everyone. (And the therapists
may know nothing about PAS either.) The alienator does not go, nor does
the alienator bring the children. The alienator recognizes that he (she)
can violate the court’s order for treatment with impunity. The alienated
parent, in desperation, decides to bring the case back to court. By this
time another six-to-nine months may have elapsed. Another hearing is scheduled
six months to a year later. By this point, in typical cases, the PAS has
become even more deeply entrenched in the children’s brain circuitry,
and the children, by this time, have been alienated for three years or
more (Gardner, 1997). Back in court, the judge decides that the original
evaluation is too old and orders a new evaluation. Sometimes this
may be an update of the earlier one, and sometimes a new evaluator is
brought in. In either case, the judge may take the position that any evaluator
will do and is not concerned with whether the evaluator has any knowledge
at all of the PAS. This takes another six months to a year. The new evaluator
recommends more therapy. After the third or fourth round, the children
are in their teens, and the judge (by this time the fourth or fifth one)
throws up his (her) hands, claiming that there is nothing that can be
done with teenagers. At that point, the children have become permanently
alienated, and the judiciary has basically joined forces with the alienating
parent in bringing about this all too common tragic result.
My follow-up study of 99
children provides compelling evidence for this outcome (Gardner, 2001b,
and at http://www.rgardner.com/refs/ar8.html). In those cases in which the court saw fit
to transfer custody from the alienating to the alienated parent there
was 100 percent success rate regarding alleviation, if not complete evaporation
of PAS symptoms. In contrast, when the court chose to allow PAS children
to remain with the indoctrinating parent, there was a 91 percent rate
of permanent alienation from the targeted parent. At any point in this
tragic sequence, had the court seen fit to impose the aforementioned sanctions
program, it is highly likely that the PAS would have been prevented (in
the early stages) and reversed (in the moderate forms, and even in some
of the severe forms). This tragedy is being played out daily in courts of
law throughout the United States, Canada, and many countries abroad. I
have often said that over 95 percent of PAS indoctrinators would be cured
(and I do not hesitate to use that word in this situation) by a weekend
in jail. I really believe that this would work. However, as mentioned,
I have personally not once seen a case in which a judge has even threatened
to do this.
Alienators know that it
is very easy to "work the system" and even "beat the system." They know that
nothing will happen to them if they lie on the witness stand. They parrot
the oath before testifying because they recognize that they have to swear
to tell the truth in order to be allowed to then promulgate their strings
of lies. They know well that the likelihood of the judge penalizing them
for perjuring themselves on the witness stand is just about zero. I have
been testifying in custody cases almost 40 years. Not once have I ever seen
a judge penalize a parent for perjuring himself (herself) on a witness stand.
I recognize that the judge may appreciate that the witness is lying and that
the lies affect the decision. However, I have never seen a case in which
the judge has identified the perjury per se and penalized the witness for
it. This failure to take action against perjurers provides support for PAS
indoctrinators, and it is another way in which they make a mockery of the
judicial process.
It is in dealing (or failing
to deal) with PAS indoctrinators that the judiciary has failed abysmally
in its obligation to serve children’s best interests and to protect them
from PAS-indoctrinating abusers. Poisoning a child to hate a loving and dedicated
parent is a form of emotional abuse per se. It is important to note that
courts have been very eager to impose the same sanctions on parents (usually
fathers) who renege on their financial commitments to their spouses and children.
However, the same sanctions are rarely imposed when courts deal with PAS
alienators.
In some cases, courts have
indeed implemented Plan B and transferred custody to the home of the alienated
parent. Unfortunately, in most cases in which such transfer has taken place,
the court has not recognized the importance of significant reduction of the
alienator’s access to the children. Often, a traditional visitation schedule
is ordered for the alienating parent. Under such circumstances, the children
continue to be programmed and so continue to victimize the target parent.
Courts do well to view PAS alienators like other kinds of abusers who require
very restricted time frames of access, sometimes with supervision. I know
that there are cases in which courts have so restricted PAS indoctrinators,
but they are so uncommon that they are considered newsworthy by the media.
I, myself, have had cases in which the court has transferred custody, but
I have never personally seen one in which the court has also ordered extremely
restricted visitation for the programmer (such as two-to-four hours a week),
and I have never seen a court ordered supervision for such an abusing parent.
However, I have heard from
colleagues about isolated cases in which courts have ordered supervised visitation
for PAS indoctrinators. I suspect strongly that any benefits to be derived
from such an arrangement have less to do with the value of the supervisor
per se and much more to do with the reduced access that supervision entailed.
Even in the course of these short visits indoctrinating parents can easily
program children. The healthy mother says, "How is your father?" The vocal
intonations communicate concern. A PAS mother says, "How is your father?"
using the same words, yet the vocal intonations communicate artificiality,
no real concern, and even scorn. No supervisor can possibly stop these inferences
and their effects on the child.
The Special PAS Therapist
With regard to the court-ordered
therapy described in Table 3, I cannot emphasize strongly enough that
the court must order treatment with someone who is knowledgeable
about the special techniques necessary for treating PAS children (Gardner,
1998, 2001a). However, such treatment will prove futile if the children
still have significant access to the alienating parent. The analogy to
youngsters who have been inveigled into a cult is applicable here. One
cannot successfully treat such youngsters as long as they are living primarily
in the cult compound. Seeing them in treatment once or twice a week for
45-60 minutes is not going to work as long as the children spend the rest
of the week with the cult indoctrinators. Treating children under these
circumstances is like throwing pebbles at a tank. It just won’t work,
and courts must appreciate this. Therapy is not a panacea. Therapy is
far less effective than some judges would like to believe. But it has
no chance at all for success if the therapist is not familiar with the
PAS and comfortable with the special techniques necessary for treating
such families.
Therapists not familiar
with the special techniques necessary for the treatment of PAS children
are very likely to empower them. Throughout their training they have been
told that it is extremely important to "listen" to children, to "respect"
them, and to be really sensitive to their needs. And this is in
contrast to their parents who are often viewed as people who lack these
sensitivities. While waving these banners they empower children and entrench
ever more deeply their PAS symptomatology. Elsewhere, I have described
this problem in detail (Gardner, 2002a).
It goes beyond the purposes
of this article to describe in detail the special techniques necessary for therapists
to utilize if they are to successfully treat PAS families. However, I will comment
here on a few of the provisos that need to be satisfied for such therapists.
They must be comfortable with waiving traditional confidentiality, because they
must be able to communicate freely with attorneys and the court regarding what
occurs in the sessions. They must be comfortable with authoritative and even
dictatorial approaches: "If the children are not dropped off at their father’s
house by 5:00 p.m. on Friday, I will, on Monday morning, notify the court that
you have been in violation of the court-ordered visitation schedule," "If the
children are not returned at 7:00 p.m. this Sunday evening, as ordered by the
court, on Monday morning I will recommend that the court impose sanctions—starting
with posting a bond, and then a fine. If that doesn’t work, I’m going to recommend
that the court order you into a specified number of hours of community service.
This should help you remember to comply with the court-ordered visitation schedule,"
"If the children refuse to visit, I will consider you to be responsible, not
the children. It is clear to me that you’re the one who is pulling strings here,
and you are the primary reason why the children won’t visit."
Therapists who are not comfortable
using these authoritarian techniques, which are clearly at variance with traditional
approaches, should not be treating PAS families. Judges who are not willing
to order treatment with such therapists are also not working in accordance with
the children’s best interests.
GUARDIANS AD LITEM
A guardian ad litem who
is not familiar with the causes, manifestations, and proper treatment of
children with PAS will not serve their best interests. The guardian who takes
pride in supporting what children profess they want is likely to perpetuate
the psychopathology of children suffering with PAS. The guardian must recognize
that PAS children need to be forced into doing things that they profess they
do not want to do. In order to do this, the guardian must "switch gears"
and unlearn certain principles learned in law school regarding being a zealous
supporter of one’s client’s requests and demands. Guardians must be ever
aware that the client is a child, not an adult. Furthermore, he (she) must
be ever aware that the client is just not any child, but a PAS child. If
these considerations are taken into account, the guardian will be comfortable
doing just the opposite of what the client requests. Such a guardian must
be comfortable with the children’s criticisms and must be willing to be used
as the excuse for the children saying to the alienating parent: "I really
hate that lawyer. He says I must visit my father (mother). I really hate
him (her). You know, Mommy (Daddy), I love you, and I don’t want to go there,
but that stupid lawyer makes me go." In this way, the guardian is used as
a vehicle for assuaging the child’s guilt over disloyalty to the alienator
implied by any willingness to visit with the alienated parent.
I cannot emphasize this
point strongly enough. PAS children want to be forced. They want to be able
to say to the alienator, "I really hate going, but the judge/guardian forces
me to. I really hate every minute I’m there." Once they have been able to
say this, they can often visit and enjoy themselves immensely. However, on
return, they will describe to the alienator all the indignities and tortures
they suffered at the hands of the allegedly despised victim parent.
Most guardians would agree
that they would not support a child’s refusal to go to school, to the doctor,
to eat, to sleep, to bathe, etc. Yet the same guardian will support zealously
the child’s wish not to have any contact at all with a loving parent—a parent
who prior to the separation was completely devoted to the child.
The guardian who is truly
working for the children’s best interests will be able to say to the court:
"It is not in these children’s best interests for me to parrot everything
they say, to rubber stamp every claim they have, and to zealously support
their professions of refusal to visit their (mother/father). It is in the
best interests of these children that the court order them to visit. They
should also be warned that if they do not visit, their (father/mother) will
be considered responsible, in contempt of court, and punished by the court."
Guardians who are comfortable with this approach to their PAS clients will
indeed be serving their clients’ best interests.
BLAMING THE VICTIM
A common maneuver utilized by
attorneys representing a PAS indoctrinating parent is to blame the target parent
as the cause of the children’s alienation. For example, an attorney representing
an alienating mother may say to the court: "We don’t deny for one minute that
these children are alienated. There is no question about that. The husband claims
that my client is programming them and they are suffering with this so-called,
this alleged, "parental alienation syndrome" or whatever you call it. What he
does not want to admit, Your Honor, is that he has brought this upon himself.
It is his behavior that has brought about the children’s alienation,
and it has nothing to do with my client." When true PAS is present, and the
victim parent has not been in any way responsible for the children’s alienation,
then this is a cruel maneuver, however this is typical of the kind of thing
lawyers do. Fearing that the court will believe the wife’s lawyer here, only
adds to the misery of the victim parent.
Unfortunately, there are judges
who will "buy into" this specious argument and accept as valid every frivolous,
absurd, and preposterous complaint the children have to justify their campaign
of denigration and ongoing rejection of the innocent victim parent. I have seen
courts recommend that such fathers take courses in "parenting skills." They
take the course and learn nothing, because they already have good parenting
skills. But what does happen is that more time is given to the programmer to
entrench the children’s PAS campaign of denigration. The "he (she)-brought-it-upon-himself
(herself)" flag is sometimes waved by mental health professionals. They may
use the term, justified estrangement to refer to the children’s alienation
from the victim parent. There are situations in which the court will order supervision
of the victim parent in order to protect the children from his alleged abuses.
The supervisors may then also wave this banner, and will interpret the children’s
animosity as due to something he has done in the meeting, and they usually find
something. For example, a father’s crying will be interpreted as a "manipulation"
of the children. His beseeching the children to trust their own judgment regarding
his alleged depravities will be labeled "an attempt to discredit and criticize"
the alienating parent, thus violating court orders to refrain from such behavior.
All this only deepens the alienated parent’s sense of frustration and impotent
rage.
THE PAS VS. PA CONTROVERSY
A parent accused of inducing
a PAS in a child is likely to engage the services of an attorney who can be
relied upon to invoke the argument that there is no such thing as a PAS. The
reasoning goes like this: "If there is no such thing as the PAS, then there
is no programmer, and therefore my client cannot be accused of brainwashing
the children." This is an extremely important point, and I cannot emphasize
it strongly enough. It is a central element in the controversy over the PAS,
a controversy that has been played out in courtrooms not only in the United
States, but in many other countries as well. And if the allegedly dubious lawyer
can demonstrate that the PAS is not listed in DSM-IV, then the position is considered
"proven." The lawyer may have seen PAS in many cases and even argued for its
existence in them. He (she) may recognize, as well, that there were too few
articles on the PAS in the early 1990s to warrant submission to the DSM-IV which
was published in 1994, but that it certainly will be a candidate for DSM-V,
scheduled to be published in the year 2010.
This lawyer may recognize that
there are now at least 145 peer-reviewed articles in the scientific literature
on the PAS (these are listed and frequently updated on my website at http://www.rgardner.com/refs/pas_peerreviewarticles.html) and that there are now at least 68 legal citations
from courts of law that have recognized the disorder (these are also listed
and frequently updated on my website at http://www.rgardner.com/refs/pas_legalcites.html). The lawyer may also know that there are now at least
two Frye Test hearings (see Kilgore vs. Boyd [2001], and Bates
vs. Bates [2002], in the
aforementioned list of legal citations) in which the court ruled that the PAS
has gained enough recognition in the scientific community to warrant recognition
in courts of law. Such a lawyer may actually believe that such duplicity
is serving the client. The lawyer hopes, however, that the judge will be taken
in by this specious argument and will then conclude that if there is no PAS,
there is no programming, and so the client is thereby exonerated.
Another ploy used by lawyers
representing PAS alienators goes like this: "Of course, Judge, we recognize
that these children are alienated. No one can deny that. What we deny is that
there is such a thing as the PAS. We do recognize parental alienation, that
is, PA." Substituting the term parental alienation (PA) for PAS muddies
the waters, is a diversionary maneuver, and distracts the court from the causes
of the alienation. PAS demands investigation for an alienator. PA does not.
When the term PA is used, no alienator is identified, the sources of the children’s
alienation are vaguer, and the causes could lie with the mother, the father,
or both. The drawback here is that the evaluator who only uses PA may not provide
the court with proper information about the cause of the children’s alienation.
It lessens the likelihood, then, that the court will have the proper data with
which to make its decisions. Elsewhere, in my follow-up study of 99 PAS children,
I have elaborated on this important issue (Gardner, 2002b).
CONCLUSIONS
Indoctrinating parents are the
ones who are primarily responsible for the development of PAS in their children.
The children, in order to ingratiate themselves with and protect themselves
from being rejected by the alienating parent, contribute to the expansion and
intensification of PAS campaigns of denigration. Lawyers who work within the
adversary system—although they are doing what they were taught to do in law
school, that is, zealously support their clients—are playing an active role
in promulgating and entrenching the PAS. They thereby join the coterie of supporters
and enablers who typically surround PAS indoctrinators. Many lawyers do this
even when they recognize that their client is a PAS indoctrinator. Although
such lawyers may get an A+ from their law school professors, they get an F-
from this medical school professor. Such attorneys are contributing to the corruption
of youth, the poisoning of young minds, and the attenuation and even destruction
of the important parent-child bond. Elsewhere, I have described in detail their
role in producing PAS and other forms of psychopathology in children whose parents
are litigating for their custody (Gardner, 1985, 1989, 1992, 1996).
Therapists also play an important
role in the etiology and development of the PAS. This is especially done by
their empowerment of children. Many sanctimoniously profess that they really
listen to children (as opposed to the rest of us who do not). They profess
that they really respect what children want (with the implication that
the rest of us do not). What they are basically doing is contributing to pathological
empowerment, which is a central factor in the development and perpetuation of
the PAS. PAS indoctrinators know well that they can rely upon most therapists
to empower their children in this way duping the therapist into joining the
alienator's parade of enablers and supporters.
One would hope that by the time
the parade of PAS enablers reaches the courtroom, the judiciary would recognize
what is going on and bring an end to this abomination. Unfortunately, this rarely
proves to be the case. Rather, the judiciary gets drawn in and contributes immeasurably
to the perpetuation and entrenchment of the PAS, often with the result that
children become permanently alienated from a loving and kind parent. Compelling
evidence for this is to be found in my aforementioned follow-up study of 99
PAS children. When courts chose to reduce the children’s access to the alienating
parent, especially by a transfer of custody, there was an alleviation of symptoms
in all cases. In contrast, when the court chose not to restrict such
access, there was an intensification of the PAS, with the result of permanent
destruction of bonding in over 91 percent of cases. This study provides compelling
evidence that judicial decisions play a vital role in what happens to PAS children.
One of my strongest criticisms
of the judiciary is that it "lacks heart" and "really doesn’t care." Although
family court judges profess that they serve the best interests of children,
their actions (or more properly, inactions) do just the opposite. If
judges really cared about children who are PAS victims (and I do not
hesitate to use the term victim to describe these children) they would
act with "deliberate speed" as guaranteed in our Constitution. I have encountered
myriad excuses for rescheduling trials—"The judge had to go to the doctor,"
"A new judge has not been assigned," "The judge has recused himself," "The judge
has no time for a case of this complexity," "The judge is in the hospital and
there is no replacement," "The judge had to go to a funeral," "The judge’s wife
is sick," etc., etc. I have heard it said that, "the most successful lawyers
are those who know best how to slow up the court and delay the court’s ability
to make a decision." Unfortunately, there is much truth to this, and judges
allow it to happen. In short, my experience has been that most judges "just
do not care," their professions to the contrary notwithstanding.
The PAS is primarily a
product of the utilization of the adversary system for adjudicating child-custody
disputes. A parent’s primary reason for indoctrinating a PAS into a child
is to gain leverage in a court of law. In countries in which people cannot
afford to take such disputes to court, there is little public recognition
of PAS. Somehow, some way, they resolve these disputes without the utilization
of the courtroom proceedings. I believe that if courtrooms were not available
for the adjudication of child-custody disputes, some children would certainly
suffer, but more would be better off. Years of exposure to and embroilment
in courtroom litigation scar most children. To recommend that the courtroom
doors be closed to parents who are disputing over the custody of their children
is not realistic. However, I am convinced that such blockage, such unavailability,
would protect more children than it would harm. The number of children who
would suffer untoward consequences from not having a court of law available
to protect them would be small compared to the benefits enjoyed by those
who would not have that forum available to them. In short, the system as
it exists today is doing PAS families much more harm than good and is not
serving the best interests of the children. It has been the purpose of this
article to focus on the judiciary’s role in the perpetuation of this tragic
situation.
References
Gardner, R. A. (1985), Child Custody Litigation: A Guide for Parents and Mental Health Professionals. Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.
_______ (1989), Family Evaluation in Child Custody Mediation, Arbitration, and Litigation. Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.
_______ (1992), The Parental Alienation Syndrome: A Guide for Mental Health and Legal Professionals. Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.
_______ (1996), Testifying in Court: A Guide for Mental Health Professionals. Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.
_______ (1997), The embedment in the brain circuitry phenomenon (EBCP). Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 25:151-176.
_______ (1998), The Parental Alienation Syndrome (Second Edition). Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.
_______ (2001a), Therapeutic
Interventions for Children with Parental Alienation Syndrome. Cresskill, New Jersey: Creative Therapeutics, Inc.
_______ (2001b), Should courts order PAS children to visit/reside with the alienated parent? A follow-up study. The American Journal of Forensic Psychology, 19:60-106 and http://www.rgardner.com/refs/ar8.html
_______ (2002a), The empowerment of children in the development of the parental alienation syndrome, American Journal of Forensic Psychology, 20(2):5-29 and http://www.rgardner.com/refs/ar14.html
_______ (2002b), Parental alienation syndrome vs. parental alienation: which diagnosis should evaluators use in child-custody litigation? The American Journal of Family Therapy, 30:101-123 and http://www.rgardner.com/refs/ar10.html
U.S. Senate, SB577. http://www.senate.state.mo.us/96info/bills/SB577.htm
*This article and the tables referred to within it
can be downloaded from Dr. Gardner's website at http://www.rgardner.com/ar11.html
and http://www.rgardner.com/3pastables.html