Domestic abusers incite reactive abuse and record their victims
- By Lisa Aronson Fontes, PhD
Some domestic abusers provoke their target, inciting what’s often known as reactive abuse, and use the resulting recordings to flip the story.
Here are some examples:
Gary would humiliate Sandra, prevent her from sleeping and grab and shake her. Sometimes he would interrogate her for hours about where she had been and who she had seen. And sometimes Sandra responded in ways that she now regrets—shouting at Gary, throwing things and slamming doors in frustration. She finally filed for divorce to protect herself and her children from Gary’s control and drunken outbursts. She was shocked when Gary filed for a protective order, claiming that she had abused him, using recordings that he had secretly taken as evidence. He showed carefully edited clips from the secret recordings to neighbors, family members and friends. He tried to make people believe that Sandra was a crazy abuser and that he was an innocent victim.
One day Kayesha noticed that her wife, Samantha, was not helping with Rhondelle, their 10-year-old special needs daughter who was screaming and refusing to move when she was supposed to be getting dressed. Instead, Samantha was recording the incident with her cell phone. Later that day, Samantha provoked Rhondelle to have a “meltdown” and then stepped away to record Kayesha trying to handle their very upset daughter. Later, Samantha used these recordings to claim that Kayesha did not know how to handle Rhondelle and should not have custody.
How Survivors Can Protect Themselves from Being Tricked
Increasingly, domestic abusers are relying on recordings to claim that their abuse victims are actually the primary aggressors or unfit parents. This serves as a form of gaslighting (making the other person feel crazy or seem crazy to others) as well as “flipping the story” (making others believe the victim is the aggressor). Sometimes abuse victims begin to wonder if they are equally responsible for the abuse because they fought back, shouted or maybe even threatened the abuser with a weapon when they felt terrified and knew they did not have the strength to fight without a weapon.
Here are some tips to protect yourself from this trickery:
- Try to Avoid Reacting Violently: Like other victims, you may engage in reactive abuse to protect yourself—maybe pushing or threatening the abuser. While this is understandable, it can still get you in trouble. Much better, find a way out before the situation escalates to the point where you might get provoked and recorded doing something violent.
- Stay Calm: Keep in mind that the abuser will use anything you do or say against you. Try not to allow yourself to be provoked into doing or saying something you will regret—whether in person, on a call or through texts or emails. The gray rock technique works for some people.
- Collect Evidence: Any of the following may help you in a legal case for protection, divorce, or child custody: Photographs of bruises, holes in walls or doors, or objects that the abuser has broken; and copies of texts or emails, especially if these contain lies, intimidation, or threats. Keep a journal of the abuse and send it to someone or store it in a computer cloud. If possible, keep the evidence safe and date-stamped. Get statements from witnesses. If you need medical care for injuries, do not lie to the provider about the source of your injuries—someday, you may need this paper trail.
- Seek Help and Make a Safe Exit Strategy: If you find yourself reacting in ways that are “not you,” contact your local domestic violence agency and make a safety plan.
- Report the Abuse: People fail to report abuse to the police for many reasons, including fear, love for the abuser, economic dependence and not wanting to harm the parent of their children. However, when domestic abuse victims do not report assaults or fail to file for orders of protection, they leave themselves open to false claims by the abuser about who is hurting whom. This is a special problem in cases of child custody.
Let’s go back to Sandra, whose abusive husband had secretly collected thousands of hours of recordings of her. He assembled a few clips into a recording that he showed to everyone he knew. How did this work out for him? In this case, the psychology evaluator considered his secret recordings a form of abuse and refused to view the clips. The Guardian Ad Litem did view the recordings and seemed to be influenced by them, but then a domestic violence expert refuted the GAL’s report, questioning her professionalism for being influenced by these illegally obtained recordings.
Yes, it’s hard to maintain your composure if someone is deliberately provoking you and trying to get you upset. But remember, the situation may be recorded. Try to resist falling victim to “provoke and record.”
Content retrieved from: https://www.domesticshelters.org/articles/technology/when-abusers-provoke-and-record?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=oct11.