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PBS
Portrays Known Child Abuser as Hero
Juvenile Court Found Mother Culpable
of Multiple Counts of Child Abuse
Sadia
Loeliger, one of the central characters
in Breaking the Silence: Children's Stories,
is portrayed by the filmmakers as a
heroic mom. The filmmakers spotlight and
applaud her fight to gain custody
of her daughter Fatima, who is also featured.
After
the film's debut I was contacted by Dr.
Scott Loeliger, Sadia's ex-husband, and
we are now revealing, for the first time
publicly,
Sadia's long, documented history of child
abuse--a history which the film's producers
chose to ignore despite
repeated warnings.
We are
launching Round 2 of our campaign against
Breaking the Silence today--read
the shocking Loeliger revelations
here and then return to this E-newsletter
for instructions on how you can participate.
Round 2 of the Campaign Begins
To date,
we have generated over 4,000 calls and letters
to PBS protesting Breaking the Silence.
Round 2 begins now--I want all of you to
join our campaign by clicking
here.
There
have been many indications, some of which
I am not at liberty to discuss, that our
protests have concerned PBS. The film, which
aired on some PBS affiliates on October
20 and will air on many others in the coming
weeks, is a direct assault on fatherhood.
The film portrays fathers as batterers and
child molesters who steal children from
their mothers. We want PBS to allow both
sides of this issue to be heard.
Again,
I want all of you to join our campaign by
clicking
here.
Our Side Gets Chance to Speak on Houston
PBS
To its
credit,
Houston PBS followed through on its
commitment to allow our side to air its
view of Breaking the Silence: Children's
Stories and Parental Alienation Syndrome
on its round-table discussion show
The Connection on Friday, October
28 at 8 PM CST and again on Sunday, October
30 at 5 PM CST.
The show
featured
Dr. Reena Sommer, an expert on Parental
Alienation Syndrome, as well as Andy Sperling,
director of Fathers for Equal Rights in
Houston. The opposition was represented
by
Thomas H. Burton III, General Counsel
for the nonprofit organization
Justice
for Children.
Burton
labeled Parental Alienation Syndrome "junk
science" and his group's website calls claims
of PAS an "unethical, immoral" tactic.
According
to Barbara Sweet of
Help
Stop PAS Inc, our side's points came
across loud and clear.
Thanks
to Sweet, who has done a lot of good work
on this issue, as well as to Sommer and
Sperling.
Also,
I suggest you commend Ken Lawrence, the
Director of Programming for PBS of Houston,
for his evenhandedness--to write him, click
here.
To read
a more detailed description of the Houston
broadcast, click
here.
I'm disappointed
and a little surprised at the position
Justice
for Children is taking on PAS. I had
one of their leaders, Donnalee Sarda, on
His Side with Glenn Sacks earlier
this year, and while Donna and I certainly
don't see eye to eye on everything, she
seems much more reasonable than what is
posted on their website.
I receive
a steady stream of letters from target parents
of PAS, and I told some of the stories I
was able to investigate in the first part
of my co-authored column
PBS Declares War on Dads (World
Net Daily, 10/20/05). To deny
that alienation exists, or that children
can buy into the alienation and align themselves
with the alienating parent against the target
parent, seems to me to be an intellectually
untenable position.
However,
this
is certainly not to say that claims of PAS
are not misused--in my co-authored column
PBS' Breaking the Silence: Family Law in
the Funhouse Mirror (Albany Times
Union, 10/20/05, Norfolk Virginian-Pilot,
10/24/05) I noted:
"To be
fair, it is true that there are fathers
who have alienated their own children through
their abuse or personality defects, and
who unfairly blame their children's mothers
by claiming PAS. Yet parental alienation
is a common, well-documented phenomenon.
For example, a longitudinal study published
by the American Bar Association in 2003
followed 700 'high conflict' divorce cases
over a 12 year period, and found that elements
of PAS were present in the vast majority
of them."
To hear
Sommer and Judy Jones of
Help
Stop PAS Inc on
His Side, see
The Lohstroh Case: Alienating Mother Pushes
10 Year-Old Boy to Kill Father (10/31/04).
More News on Breaking the Silence
Protests
Sacks
Discusses PBS Campaign on NPR's CrossTalk
(11/1/05)
Sacks
Discusses PBS Campaign on 700 WLW in Cincinnati
(11/1/05)
Judge Featured in Breaking the Silence
Attacks Sacks in LA Newspaper
Jeff Leving & Glenn Sacks--"Film
Goes Too Far as Advocate for Cutting Fathers
Off From Kids"
(Los Angeles Daily Journal, San
Francisco Daily Journal, 11/1/05)
No Justice
for Dads/Dads Protest Too Much
(Norfolk Virginian Pilot, 10/31/05)
Documentary failed to show the system also
victimizes men
(Albany Times Union, 10/29/05)
New documentary shines light on bitter custody
fights, draws fire from fathers
(Sacramento News & Review, 10/27/05)
Columnist: PBS Film Unfairly Represents
Fatherhood
(Agape Press, 10/27/05)
PBS Documentary Has Fathers Seething
(Family News In Focus, 10/26/05)
Mental Health Professionals Condemn PBS's
Breaking the Silence, Endorse Campaign
Last E-newsletter we
announced that the
American Psychological Association Says
Breaking the Silence Misrepresents
Its Position on PAS. Over two dozen
mental health professionals have now endorsed
our campaign. To read their statement, click
here.
Breaking the Silence:
More Credibility Problems
American Psychological Association
Says Breaking the Silence Misrepresents
Its Position on PAS
A spokeswoman
for the American Psychological Association
says that PBS's new documentary Breaking
the Silence: Children's Stories distorts
the APA's position on Parental Alienation
Syndrome. The film criticizes PAS,
which arises when one parent tries to turn
his or her children against the other parent
during a divorce or separation.
In the documentary
Joan Meier, a professor of clinical law
at George Washington University and one
of the film's chief spokespersons, states
that PAS "has been thoroughly debunked
by the American Psychological Association."
Connecticut Public Television, one of the
film's producers, put out a
press release promoting the film which
stated that PAS had been "discredited by
the American Psychological Association."
However, according
to Rhea K. Farberman, Executive Director
of Public and Member Communications of the
American Psychological Association, these
claims are "incorrect" and "inaccurate."
Farberman says that the APA "does not have
an official position on parental alienation
syndrome--pro or con." She adds:
"The Connecticut Public
Television press release is incorrect.
I have notified both Connecticut Public
Television and their PR firm of the inaccuracy
in their press release."
To learn more, click
here.
Leader of Domestic Violence Shelter Which
Helped Fund Breaking the Silence
Criticizes Film
Calling
Breaking the Silence imbalanced and
focused on extreme cases, Pam Kallsen, executive
director of the Marjaree Mason Center, a
domestic violence shelter in Fresno, California,
contacted her
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