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by
Dr. Bill Gaultiere
One of the
most disturbing and difficult calls we get at New Hope comes from
callers who claim to have molested a child. Recently Larry assisted
Cathy Spiegel and Myra McClain in handling a caller from a child
molester and conducting a successful trace. They handled this
difficult call quite well. The significance of this is huge. A
number of young girls who apparently have been violated will be
protected from further abuse by the alleged perpetrator and they
will get help to heal and recover. Other potential victims will
be spared. The perpetrator himself, if arrested, will receive
court ordered treatment and a chance to repent.
This situation
reminded me of the importance of these calls and how difficult
and confusing they can be. Therefore, we wanted to give you some
input on how to handle them effectively. When you get one of these
calls its normal to be upset and to be pulled in different
directions at once. Has the caller really violated a child? Or
is this a fantasy hes divulging to relieve himself of guilt
and/or upset you? What should you do?
The first
thing you need to do is to contain your emotional
reaction (feel your feelings - fear for the child, outrage, horror,
etc. - and keep them inside of yourself so that you dont
react impulsively and come to a quick and inaccurate conclusion).
Now you can focus on gathering more information so that you can
make sound judgments. Ask the caller if he did these things. What
did he do? (Dont let him get sexually inappropriate by giving
unnecessary explicit details.) Try to get the names of the children,
dates the abuse occurred, etc. If the caller has specific information,
sounds credible, or is upset, then his confession is probably
legitimate. He may feel guilty about what hes done and want
to stop, but be unable to.
In any case,
if youre left with a reasonable suspicion that
a child may have been abused then you need to attempt to make
a child abuse report. Make the report even if youre not
sure the abuse happened (dont try to be a detective in order
to determine for certain what happened) and make the report even
if the caller is sincere in confessing his sin and wants help
(dont take the law in your own hands). The bottom line legally,
ethically, and morally is this: If you have a reasonable
suspicion that abuse may have occurred then we need to intervene
on behalf of the child.
When youve
decided that you may be talking to a perpetrator of child abuse
follow these steps:
- 1.
Initiate a trace
as soon as you have a reasonable suspicion that
abuse may have occurred. Get another counselor to help you by
calling the Emergency Traceback Officer. (The Assistant counselor
should explain the situation to the Traceback Officer.) Try
to keep the caller on the phone until the trace is completed
and until youve done what you can to help the caller.
Dont tell the caller about the trace.
- 2. Gather
all pertinent information
to be put on the Suspected Child Abuse Form.
- Name,
address, phone number, age, sex, and location of the child
victim.
- Date,
time, and place of incident(s).
- Summary
of the abuse that happened.
- Name,
address, etc. of perpetrator - after the trace is completed
(otherwise, he may hang up on you for fear of getting caught).
- 3.
Express concern for the child
and solicit concern from the perpetrator too.
- 4.
If the caller is sincere
in his confession and is seeking help, then offer support.
If hes not sincere then confront him with what hes
done, the harm caused to this child, his lack of remorse, and
his unwillingness to change his behavior.
- 5.
Encourage the perpetrator to turn himself in and get help.
- 6.
When the trace is completed the Traceback Officer will contact
the police in the perpetrators city. The police will
then investigate the suspects background, talk with him,
and, if necessary, make an arrest. If arrested the perpetrator
will be forced to get the professional help he needs.
- 7.
When the call is completed turn your phone off to complete
your contact sheet and fill out the Suspected Child Abuse
Report form and Susie or Sheila will send it out in the
mail.
- 8.
If the trace was not successful then you should call Childrens
Protective Services to make a verbal report (with written
report to follow in the mail).
If you do
not have a reasonable suspicion that abuse may have occurred and
the caller is claiming that it did (in other words hes lying
or fantasizing) then the situation needs to be handled differently.
The caller is abusing you and this needs to be confronted. If
you think the caller is lying about having abused a child then
handle it as follows:
- 1.
Gather pertinent information
to confirm your belief that hes being dishonest.
- 2 .Verbalize
your mistrust
saying something like, It sounds to me like youre
making this up.
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