Parental Alienation IS a Crime!
Dr. Michelle Golland: A Nassau County Supreme Court justice has sentenced a mother to six weekends in jail for civil contempt. Per the judge, the guilty mom – Lauren Lippe – engaged in a pattern of “alienating” behavior wherein she made false allegations of sexual abuse against her children’s father, Ted Rubin — allegations that were calculated to interfere with her ex-husband’s scheduled time and relationship with their children.
“The extensive record is replete with instances of attempts to undermine the relationship between the children and their father and replace him with her new husband,” Justice Robert Ross stated in his ruling. “[These instances included] manipulation of the defendant’s parenting access, utter and unfettered vilification of the defendant to the children, false reporting of sexual misconduct without any semblance of ‘good faith,’ and her imposition upon the children to fear her tirades and punishment if they embrace the relationship they want to have with their father.”
“Parental alienation” is the practice of mentally manipulating or bullying your own children with the express goal of damaging their relationship with their other parent. Both parental alienation and its related practice, “hostile aggressive parenting,” deprive children of the stable and loving relationships they need when coping with divorce (and life in general).
Children who are emotionally bullied by one parent in order to hurt the other can develop a severe opposition to contact with and/or overt hatred for the target parent. Often, there seems to be no logical reason for the children’s behavior.
- Children perceive one parent as causing financial problems for the other parent.
- Children have knowledge of the divorce details or legal procedures.
- Children show a sudden hostile, negative change in attitude toward target parent.
- Children are not delivered for court-ordered visitation and/or are not allowed to “choose” to visit the target parent.
- False allegations of abuse are made against the target parent.
- Children are asked to choose one parent over the other.
- Anger and negativity toward target parent is reinforced.
- Children are given the impression that if they have a good time with the target parent during a visit, it will hurt them.
- Children are asked about the target parent’s personal life.
- Children are “rescued” from the target parent when there is no danger.
Author: Dahlia Boyd
A freelance journalist with a journalism major from the University of Sydney. I have various interests including the environment, human rights and animal welfare. I have written for a number of online news portals as well as for print monthlies, and I write exclusively for Ezine4Males on male-interest topics. Feel free to contact me if you have any topics that you wish to be researched, written about and published.
This author has published 25 articles so far.














