Man claims he witnessed Bradley murder, Women Think Sexual Violence is Normal
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- Man claims he witnessed Dana Bradley murder RCMP
investigate, inform him no new evidence found - ‘The guy is the real
thing’ Doctor says man’s story of Dana Bradley murder shouldn’t be written
off as false memory syndrome - ‘There’s nothing left I can do,’ says man
convinced he witnessed murder
- Disturbing Study Finds Women Actually
Think Sexual Violence is Normal - Normalizing Sexual Violence - Young Women
Account for Harassment and Abuse
Man claims he witnessed Dana
Bradley murder Tara Bradbury and Glen Whiffen Published on March 15,
2014
RCMP investigate, inform him no new evidence found
Dana
Bradley’s body was arranged in burial fashion by her killer in an area of alder
bushes and trees off an old dirt road, away from the eyes of the city on a cold
and quiet December evening many years ago.
One of the killer’s last acts
at the scene was to tuck her school books carefully under her arm, as in some
bizarre act of kindness when, sometime earlier, the monster in him had raged and
he had brutally beat her about the head and robbed her of her life....
He
said he saw the savageness in the killer that evening, claims he witnessed the
horrific murder and the events following it that night.
As a child, he
had known the man well. Suffering from his own type of hell with him, Robert
says his memories from that day and night were long repressed, along with many
other terrible memories from those years.
More than two-and-a-half years
ago, after he decided to part ways with booze and take his chances without it,
he says his mind healed and the memories surfaced — first of being sexually
abused at the hands of the man, then of the murder....
Robert says the
RCMP first met with him on Dec. 14, 2011 — the 30th anniversary of Dana’s
murder.
According to an RCMP document, the investigation into Robert’s
tip continued for 16 months.
The RCMP subsequently informed Robert that
none of the avenues related to his tip provided any new evidence to support
criminal charges.
In March 2013, the RCMP asked Robert to meet with Dr.
Peter Collins, an expert in the field of forensic psychiatry.
“Subsequent
to that meeting, you were advised by Dr. Collins that you were not suffering
from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and recovered memories, but rather
that you were experiencing false memory syndrome,” the document
notes.
Robert complained to the Commission for Public Complaints Against
the RCMP about the way investigators handled his information. He alleged the
RCMP relied on false memory syndrome to make the decision to dismiss his
complaint. He also pointed out that false memory syndrome is not recognized in
the medical community....
At the same time, the RCMP informed Robert the
investigation into his complaint about being sexually abused by the man in the
early 1980s had concluded without corroborating evidence to support
charges....
Looking back, Robert said the man probably wanted him to go
along as a cover, in case he was seen, so that he could say he was taking him to
his mother and father.
This time, Robert noted, the man didn’t attempt to
drive up the dirt road but stopped on the side of Maddox Cove Road and walked up
to where the body was.
“He was looking for his jacket — he didn’t have
his jacket on — and he had gotten the booster cables,” Robert said. “So while I
was left in the car, there was a car that drove by. He told me that if anyone
stops, (to say) he left his new chainsaw up in the woods.”
As outlined in
previous media reports, a Shea Heights couple driving north on Maddox Cove Road
that night — between midnight and 1 a.m. — noticed a car matching the suspect
vehicle parked on the side of the road. They said a passenger side door of the
car was open and the dome light was illuminated. They also saw a man standing
near the woods. They reported he had no jacket, despite the cold....
They
then drove back to the man’s house, where Robert held a work light while the man
washed the trunk of the car using cleaning supplies.
“He cleaned out the
trunk and then he got me in the backseat of the car and had another go (sexual
assault) at me,” Robert said. “And then he brought me home.”....
The man
Robert describes had been a close friend of his parents in the early
1980s. In the 1990s, he was convicted of sexually abusing children and served
time in prison. The time period of those offences is the same time frame
Robert alleges he was abused by the man and Dana’s murder
occurred....
‘The guy
is the real thing’ Tara Bradbury and Glen Whiffen Published on March
17, 2014
Doctor says man’s story of Dana Bradley murder shouldn’t be
written off as false memory syndrome
Part 2 in a three-part
series
Good memories from childhood are often recalled fondly. Bad
memories, not so much. But what if the memories are so terrible, so horrible,
it’s unbearable to live with them?....
He says he saw her murderer
sexually assault and kill her by hitting her in the head with a tire iron and
that he was there, crying, when the killer laid her out in burial fashion among
the trees off an old dirt road just outside the city.
Robert’s relates
these memories in spine-tingling detail — how he screamed and begged the man, a
close friend of his family, not to leave the body in the winter cold overnight,
and of being forced to hold a lamp in the dark as the killer later cleaned out
the car trunk.
His throat closes and his chest hurts at times when he
recalls his own abuse at the hands of the same man — a man who was convicted in
the 1990s of sexually abusing other children, and served time in
prison.
Robert would have gone to the police long ago if he had
remembered any of what he had seen and experienced.
Now a successful
businessman, husband and father, Robert describes always looking back on his
childhood fondly, though he admits he had always had a hole, a big blank spot,
in his memory.
He drank from the time he was 13 until he was 35, when, he
says, the booze caught up with him.
After quitting drinking, he was
driving home one day in 2011 when he suddenly began drowning in a wave of
memories, which rushed in, bubbling and swirling, to fill the hole.
“I
was all alone, and the first memory of the sexual abuse came back, and it came
back like a punch in the stomach,” Robert said....
The RCMP investigated
Robert’s information for 16 months, then informed him none of the avenues
related to his tip had turned up any new evidence. As part of their
investigation, police had asked Robert to meet with Dr. Peter Collins, an expert
in forensic psychiatry.
According to a police document, Collins advised
Robert he was not suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but was
experiencing false memory syndrome.
Not a recognized psychiatric
disorder, false memory syndrome is used to describe a condition in which a
person is affected by memories which aren’t true, but which they strongly
believe. The term was developed in the United States by Peter and Pamela Freyd,
who also founded the False Memory Syndrome Foundation in 1992....
Dr.
Hugh Mirolo is the province’s only neuropsychiatrist and has been declared an
expert witness in the courts in the area of neuropsychiatry. The Telegram asked
him to meet with Robert, and the doctor believes he is telling the truth,
especially since Robert experienced a panic attack and flashback while telling
him his story.
“It would be pretty damn difficult for a guy to make that
up, and for me to buy it,” said Mirolo, who had Robert’s permission to share his
opinions with The Telegram.
“If he is an actor, he is a very, very good
actor. He deserves an Oscar.”
Robert’s reaction was consistent with
experiences Mirolo has witnessed in the past as a doctor in the United States,
working with war veterans. Post-traumatic stress disorder can cause flashbacks
that bring them right back to the time and place of a memory so they are
reliving it instead of simply recalling it, Mirolo said....
There is a
tendency for the brain to repress things that are traumatic, the doctor
explained, and it’s as basic as the pleasure principle: we go towards things
that are pleasurable and avoid things that aren’t.
“When you have PTSD or
(have witnessed) gory events, things like that, those things can be blocked,”
Mirolo explained.
“The blockage is not foolproof; things can trigger it.
The same goes for regular childhood memories. When I go to my office in the
summer and they’re mowing the lawn outside, I remember the house in the country
where my dad used to mow the lawn. That smell brings me back in time. This is
the same sort of thing.”....
Mirolo doesn’t mince words when asked if he
feels Robert was dismissed unfairly by the police, when it comes to false memory
syndrome.
‘There’s
nothing left I can do,’ says man convinced he witnessed murder Tara
Bradbury and Glen Whiffen Published on March 18, 2014
....Commission
interim chair Ian McPhail wrote in the final report that the forensic
psychiatrist’s diagnosis of false memory syndrome didn’t play a role in the
attention given to the investigation, and wasn’t the basis for the
investigators’ dismissal of the tip.
“I emphasize that, given its place
in the investigation, the psychiatric assessment was not conducted to determine
whether (Robert) was lying about his memories, which would have impacted the
investigation, but rather to determine what the appropriate degree of reliance
on those memories would and could be. There is no suggestion in the available
material that (Robert) was deceitful.”
Robert told The Telegram Monday he
is surprised by what he said is a “sudden and unexpected de-emphasizing” by the
police of forensic psychiatrist Peter Collins’ diagnosis.
“Dr. Collins
applied for a temporary licence to practice in Newfoundland so he could deliver
his false memory syndrome message, and the RCMP could close my tip that very
same day,” Robert said. “He appeared to be very important to investigators at
the time.
“Things could be much further along if only they had given me
the benefit of the doubt.”
When asked how he feels about the lack of
evidence turned up by the police in their investigation into his memories,
Robert is quick to respond.
“I don’t think they looked hard enough,” he
said. “I think there were a lot of investigational techniques not used. I think
they focused on trying to discredit me, rather than try to find evidence. It was
a shallow investigation.”....
According to a police document Collins, an
expert in forensic psychiatry, advised Robert he was not suffering from
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but was experiencing false memory
syndrome, a term used to describe a condition in which a person is affected by
memories that aren’t true, but which they strongly believe.
Disturbing
Study Finds Women Actually Think Sexual Violence is Normal By Viola
Knowles , RYOT News April 15, 2014
Apparently women thinking sexual
abuse is normal is the new normal.
A study to be published in Gender
& Society finds that young women assume being harassed, assaulted and abused
is simply something everyone experiences.
Sadly, statistics show us that
they’re not exactly wrong.
Love Is Respect reports that one in three
teens in the U.S. will experience some form of abuse from a dating partner, and
one quarter of high school girls will be victims of sexual abuse.
One in
four college girls will be the victims of rape or attempted rape.
This
doesn’t include the one in three grown women who will be raped or beaten in her
lifetime.
The fact that these are no longer just stats, but a way of
thinking for women, shows that the time to take action is now.
Normalizing Sexual
Violence Young Women Account for Harassment and Abuse Heather R.
Hlavka Marquette University, USA
Despite high rates of gendered
violence among youth, very few young women report these incidents to authority
figures. This study moves the discussion from the question of why young women do
not report them toward how violence is produced, maintained, and normalized
among youth.... http://gas.sagepub.com/content/early/2014/02/28/0891243214526468.full http://goo.gl/o8TSCP