Medico-Legal Journal (1999) Vol.67 Part 3, 121-123
Parental Alienation and the Judiciary
Dr L F Lowenstein, MA, Dip Psych, PhD
Increasing numbers of cases are coming before the Courts where one parent feels
displaced in relation to the children in the family. The syndrome, parental
alienation (PAS),' as it is now called, is not a new one, but its importance
is being highlighted in the United States as well as in the UK. Judges are often
uncertain as to how to treat the situation where one parent seeks to make contact
with the children following an estrangement, separation, or an unusually unpleasant
and vicious divorce.
There is some pressure on the Judiciary to keep the child or children with
the person who has major control, usually the mother. Parental alienation however,
also affects some mothers denied contact with their children who are resident
with the father. On the whole, it is the male member of the partnership who
suffers from the alienation situation.
In recent cases in which I have personally been involved, I had the opportunity
of talking about PAS and its problems with two judges, on different occasions.
The dilemma is how to deal with the case where the resident partner i.e. the
alienating partner, fails to co-operate with the courts in providing adequate
access for the other partner. I will recreate the general conversation, on an
informal basis and hence no names can be mentioned. Interestingly, similar conversations
were repeated with both judges, one male and one female, demonstrating how similar
problems are often faced by the Judiciary in parental alienation cases.
Psych.: Your Honour, this is a case typical of parental alienation and
I feel it is only right that the alienated parent should have contact with the child in question.
Judge: But the mother says that the child does not want any contact
with the boy.
Psych.: This is because there has been a considerable amount of programming,
I have discovered through my assessment, to make the child respond in this manner.
Judge: This may well be so but how do I deal with this situation when
mother stubbornly refuses to allow contact of the child with the father?
Psych.: It is a difficult situation, your Honour, but the question remains:
should justice be done or should it be ignored?
Judge: it is not as easy as that. I have spent time with mothers, even
sitting in a cell, to try to get them to see reason to allow their former husbands
to have access to a child. Sometimes this has worked while at other times, there
has been a refusal. This puts me he a very awkward position since I must consider
carefully, first and foremost, the children concerned and they are, after all,
in the care of their mother who, if they are deprived of her, due to her being
sentenced for failing to follow instructions, will lose a mother vital to their
welfare.
Psych.: Again it comes down, your Honour, to considering the question
of failure to comply with the Court ruling. If an ordinary criminal fails to
obey instructions of the Court, some punitive action is taken. Should not some
punitive action also follow when a mother, or father for that matter, refuses
to accede to the ruling of the judge and the Court?
Judge: Well, I will see what I can do on this particular matter and
the case before me but I still feel that it is a difficult one to settle, when
one of the partners is totally opposed to contact with the child and the child
in question has decided openly and before me, to refuse to have any contact
with the other parent. Are you suggesting that I fine the mother in question
or place her in a prison for failing to adhere to my instructions and that of
the Court?
Psych.: I personally see no other alternative. It may well be that if
such a threat is made, the alienating parent may, in due course, accept what
has been recommended by the Court and there will be no need to take the action
which you and I both feel is undesirable and may even be counter-productive.
Both judges agreed the case before them was typical of parental alienation
and the difficulties they faced are only too obvious. Their first concern, and
also that of myself, was the children. If the children have been "brain-washed"
and "programmed" in a particular direction, this made the judge's decision all
the more difficult.
It is my view that no exception can be made for failing to adhere to the ruling
of a court and that justice must be done however painful this may be. It may
well be that the alienated parent should eventually gain access following a
period of therapy between the psychologist and the child or children in question,
to make them aware of what is happening. If older they themselves may well be
able to put pressure on the alienating parent to see sense.
From the conversation, it can be seen that many judges are undoubtedly unsure
how best to deal with alienating parents - this usually being the mother. Judges
are often saved by the fact that fathers cease to pursue their role of wishing
to play a part in their childrens' lives. This is due to the resistance they
meet from the former spouse, who has often formed a new relationship and wishes
the new partner to take over the role of father. I have even known cases where
the mother insisted the child call the new husband "dad" and the natural father
by his first name.
Fathers who pursue both their right and their sense of responsibility through
the courts are relatively few. Many opt out due to the resistance they meet
from their ex-partners, the programmed child and the reluctance of judges to
give them justice. This is undoubtedly due to the following:
Judges are reluctant to punish and most especially incarcerate obdurate
mothers who refuse to comply with a judge's decision that they must allow
access with an estranged father.
Judges often are reluctant to ignore the view expressed by children that
they do not wish to meet their fathers, despite the fact that such children
have been "intensively programmed" to respond in this way by mothers and the
mother's relations.
Judges are reluctant to advise that therapy should take place, despite
the fact that when such alienation occurs, children are damaged. Such therapy
is often recommended by expert witnesses such as a psychologist or a psychiatrist.
Such recommended periods of therapy for the child and mother are viewed by
judges (with the aid of the mother's Counsel!) as likely to damage further
the children who are involved in this conflict and hostility between the parents.
Despite such reservations, judges have a moral duty to provide justice for
the alienated party, this usually being the father. The threat of punishment
for the alienator must be supported by punishment, including removing the child
from mother's care to a neutral place or to the alienated parent, and to use
incarceration when necessary. Failure to carry out this distasteful, but necessary,
action against the obdurate party would constitute a mockery of the judicial
system. It is my experience as an expert witness to the Courts as a forensic,
clinical psychologist, that most alienating parents, whether mothers or fathers,
will obey a court order if punishment is threatened for failure to adhere to
the ruling. Hence the carrying out of the various possible measures is rarely
necessary.
In connection with PAS many judges have, without always being aware, adopted
a double standard. They see mothers who are alienators as "victims" to be protected
even when they have committed what can only be described as a form of "emotional
abuse". They have abused their powerful position by influencing the young children
and turning them against the other parent. They have usurped the role of the
other parent or given it to yet another partner with whom they have become associated.
In this way, they have, by destroying the right of the other parent taken away
that parent's opportunity to contribute to the child's welfare. This is at a
time when we are seeking to promote the equality of the sexes. Partners should
have equal power and responsibility toward their children.
PAS, when it has been proven, is a vicious form of gender opportunism or gender
apartheid, which those seeking through justice can no longer ignore. Judges
must stop worrying about public outcries if they remove a child from the care
of a vicious programming parent who is showing their hostility toward the former
partner.
I therefore suggest that the alienated parents, be they fathers or mothers,
be protected. In so doing we are also protecting the children of such a relationship
from a gross and calculated mis-use of power or position, that of the resident
care giver.
Judges in cases of proven PAS should act as decisively as they would if judging
a case of proven crime such as rape or murder. They must remove the child from
the emotional damage being heaped upon it, to a safe place, where the non-alienating
parent, with the help of therapy for the child, can have his influences felt
by the child. At the same time, it is necessary to help the parent who has alienated
the child in the first place. He or she has undoubtedly suffered from a considerable
amount of pathological hostility towards the former partner.
By removing the child, or children, from the influence of the "brain-washing"
alienator, the child has the opportunity of experiencing the dedication of the
previously alienated parent and to develop a less biased view of that parent.
Also the child can develop a positive view of both parents despite them being
at war with each other.
This will do much to ensure for that child that both parents, although hostile
towards one another, care and are devoted to him/her. This provides the child
with a reasonable start in life, which he or she would not have had, had the
influence of the alienator been allowed to continue along with a failure to
have any contact with the alienated parent at the same time.
Dr L F Lowenstein
Allington Manor, Allington Lane
Fair Oak, Eastleigh
Hampshire, SO50 7DE
(01703) 692621
References
1. Parent Alienation Syndrome: What the legal profession should know, MLJ Vol
66 ( 1998) pt 4, 151.