Victim Advocate Program of Butte-Silver Bow

Victim Advocate Program of Butte-Silver Bow This office helps victims of violent crime get orders of protection and helps provide all crime vict

10/04/2022
09/21/2021

I had this come up on my page today. It is regarding the death of Gabby Petito and describes many of the facets of a relationship founded on domestic violence. Worth a read. ❤️

Important lessons to learn from Gabby’s tragic life and death.

1. Based on the body camera video posted by the officers who pulled Gabby and her fiancé over for suspicious driving, some viewers assumed Gabby was suffering from mental illness and Brian was the stable one.

2. Some people may have assumed both partners were equally abusive and equally at fault - the old “it takes two” myth that doesn’t really apply to most abusive situations.

3. Some people may have even assumed Gabby was the abuser and Brian was the victim.

4. These assumptions are classic. Why? Because, in many cases, the target manages to keep things together until her breaking point, at which time others may see her crying or hear her yelling or see her breaking, and then they assume she’s “crazy.”

5. Meanwhile, the abuser plays the part of the poor, patient partner who has to deal with this crazy person. But all the while, he’s been acting very differently behind closed doors, pushing her to this point intentionally and feeding on her emotional break. He LOVES to see evidence that he has hurt her. He LOVES to see her pain.

6. For this reason, “breaking her” has been his goal from the start. It may take him hours or weeks or months or even years to break her, but he won’t stop until he gets that reaction, and then he’ll point the finger and say, “See? She’s crazy. I’m just trying to keep her calm.” And then he’ll do it again. And again. And again.

7. As a result, some people will buy into that false narrative. Even the target. Which brings me to my next point.

8. In the video, we see Gabby making many excuses for Brian’s behavior, and she takes all the blame for everything he does.

9. We also see Brian blaming Gabby and saying he was just trying to keep her calm.

10. This is also the norm for victims of long-standing abuse. A target becomes conditioned to believe everything the abuser does is her fault.

11. Also, she clearly doesn’t want Brian to be in trouble. She’d rather pay the price and protect the man she loves. Also, remember she truly believes he only acted this way because of her, so she doesn’t want him to be blamed. This is also the norm.

12. Smart officers see right through this. Others buy the cover-up story. (And because some officers are also abusers, they all too frequently side with the abuser even when they know exactly what’s going on.)

13. I actually credit the police in Gabby’s situation. They were calm, they separated the couple, they interviewed them individually, they split them up for the night, they did everything right. I’m sure the officer has tremendous guilt about the end result and wonders if he could have prevented it, but I don’t blame the officers in this case. I was actually pretty surprised and impressed with how well they treated both Brian and Gabby (and, sadly, I was thinking how rare it is to see that.)

14. Many people have been shocked by Brian’s family’s refusal to cooperate with police. I’m not shocked at all. Let’s look at that a little more closely.

15. I’m also not surprised to learn that Gabby lived with the Laundrie family for a year. We all see this family will do anything to protect their son, even at the cost of an innocent young woman who was a real part of their family and soon to be their daughter in law. While most of us can certainly understand them wanting to protect their child, they crossed a moral line when Gabby went missing.

16. But I think it goes deeper than that. I think it shows them as a system of enablers who not only allowed Brian to abuse Gabby over a long term (which probably led to her intense anxiety) but also a system of gaslighters who were probably always shifting the truth to keep Gabby confused and make her believe she’s the problem. She was caught in an entire system of abuse. And once you’re in that web, it’s very very very difficult to see a way out.

17. I imagine they probably contributed to her abuse from the start and encouraged their son’s abusive behaviors by rewarding him, making excuses for him, blaming Gabby, flipping the script, and keeping her in the fog that breaks down a person’s psyche and spirit over time.

18. Gabby and Brian had been together since their teens. This is also common. These immature relationships work beautifully when both partners grow together and mature emotionally. But when one wants to keep the other down, naive, and under his control…and the other is growing, learning, and maturing, it doesn’t work.

19. We hear Gabby tell the officer that Brian didn’t think she could do her travel blog. It seems clear that he didn’t believe in her and was trying to make her not believe in herself.

20. She also says he didn’t like her working and that he locked her out of the van because she wouldn’t calm down. But when you listen to the full video, it sounds like he was upset because they’d spent too much time at the coffee shop with her working on her website when he wanted to go hiking. She wasn’t in her seat when he was ready to leave. Control issues?! He squeezed her face with his hand in anger. He cut her down and criticized her, verbally abusing her until she was a wreck of tears. He was breaking her spirit, intentionally.

21. Why? Because her focus wasn’t 100% on him. And because she had found a job she enjoyed and was good at and that allowed her to connect with other people, when he wanted her all to himself.

22. She now had this one little piece of her life that he couldn’t completely control, so he wanted to get rid of that. It angered him. He punished her for it. See the pattern?

23. The overall takeaway? When you see someone crying like this, don’t assume she’s crazy. Don’t buy into the false narrative given by the abuser. Don’t believe the cover-up story by the target who has been conditioned to carry all the blame and shame. And don’t assume she’s going to be okay. She just may end up your next recovered body.

24. If you or someone you love are in an unhealthy relationship, please don’t assume it will get better in time. I haven’t heard one single story where it got better. Not one. Not with therapy. Not with church. Not with prayer or forgiveness or complete surrender. Nothing works when the abuser is determined to destroy that target. He will not stop until she is erased from this world or from her life. And in many cases, he’ll walk away without any consequences.

Please don’t let the next Gabby be you or someone you love.

By: Julie Perkins Cantrell

Domestic violence hotline: 1-800-799-7233

~Northern Mommy

06/29/2021

June is Elder Abuse Awareness month. The following facts were copied from a newsletter by the Montana Board of Crime Control.

Elder Abuse Facts
What is Elder Abuse?
In Montana, abuse, neglect, or exploitation generally refer to any physical, sexual, or psychological abuse, neglect, abandonment, or financial exploitation of an older adult.

Emotional or psychological harm refers to verbal or nonverbal behaviors that inflict anguish, mental pain, fear, or distress. This may include, but is not limited to: verbal assaults, insults, threats, intimidation, humiliation, and harassment. In addition, inappropriately treating an older adult like an infant, isolating from family/friends or regular activities, giving the ‘silent treatment’ and enforced social isolation.
Exploitation is the illegal, unauthorized, or improper use of older adult’s money, benefits, shelter, clothing, belongings, property, or assets for the benefit of someone other than older adults.
Physical harm is use force that may result in bodily injury, physical pain, or impairment. This may include but is not limited to shaking, burning, kicking, pinching, and slaps. In addition, inappropriate drugs and physical restraints, force feeding, and physical punishment of any kind physical punishment of any kind.
Sexual harm is non-consensual sexual contact, comments, or action of any kind. This may include but is not limited to unwanted touching, all types of sexual assault or battery(rape), so**my, coerced nudity, sexually explicit photographing, harmful ge***al practices (i.e. excessive or forceful bathing), voyeurism, and exhibitionism.
How common is Elder Abuse?
Elder abuse is common. Abuse, including neglect and exploitation, are experienced by about 1 in 10 people aged 60 and older who live at home. From 2002 to 2016, more than 643,000 older adults were treated in the emergency department for nonfatal assaults and over 19,000 homicides occurred. (Center for Disease Control)

Around 1 in 6 people 60 years and old experienced some form of abuse in community settings during the past year. (World Health Organization)

Who is affected?
Unfortunately, 1 in 6 older adults (age 60 and higher) are affected. Older adults of all races, genders, sexuality, mobility, and socio-economic status may experience abuse. But elder abuse doesn’t only happen to the frail and sick. Older people with dementia are at special risk. As many as 2 out of 3 people with dementia have been abused (World Health Organization)

I suspect someone or myself is experiencing harm. What do I do?
Contact Law Enforcement about your concerns. In cases of emergency, always contact 911.

https://www.siumed.edu/pr/highlights/why-dont-they-report-sexual-assault.html
01/25/2021

https://www.siumed.edu/pr/highlights/why-dont-they-report-sexual-assault.html

When a house is robbed, rarely is the question posed of “Why was the house decorated that way if it didn’t want burglarized?” When a car is broken into, no one says “Well it should have been covered up.” But when someone is sexually harassed, assaulted or r***d, those are always the first ...

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