Saturday, June 28, 2014

Terror of Sexual Assault as Coercion and Sexually Abusive Monitoring




It is not necessary to make physical contact with a child to inflict sexual abuse.[1] The American Psychological Association, the Incest Survivors Resource Network[2], and the National Child Traumatic Stress Network[3] all acknowledge non-touching sexual abuse. The American Psychological Association website says, “Child sexual abuse is not solely restricted to physical contact; such abuse could include noncontact abuse, such as exposure, voyeurism, and child pornography.”

Any sexual conduct, or threat of sexual conduct harmful to a child's mental, emotional, or physical welfare is sexual abuse. Violating a child’s reasonable expectation of bodily privacy, like watching on them in the shower or bedroom or bathroom or in states of undress, is sexual abuse.[4] [5]

Exploiting the fear of sexual abuse to coerce behavior is sexual abuse.[6] A child cannot discern if the threat of sexual exploitation is just a hollow threat or if it is a precursor to an attack.

A facility owned by the agency responsible for identifying child abuse, and caring for abused children cannot claim ignorance to children’s perception of potential sexual exploitation. Staff at Valley of the Moon Children’s Home exploit sexual terror in order to coerce compliance of the children in their care. Ygritte was one such child.

After an emotionally exhaustive afternoon dealing with the death of both of her parents, Ygritte attempted to be by herself in her room away from staff.[7] She closed the door and sat with her feet on the door, trying to assure her privacy. Two male staff members pushed their way in her bedroom.

Ygritte left her room and went into the bathroom. One male staff member held the bathroom door open while Ygritte was in the shower stall. A female staff member visually “checked on” Ygritte while she was in the shower stall with the curtain drawn. A male staff member entered the bathroom but quickly left with the second male staff member.

Ygritte left the bathroom, turned around, walked back into the bathroom, and locked the door to the bathroom. A male and female staff member tried to unlock the door but were unsuccessful. They called for a key. Ygritte opened the door but did not exit. Male staff member again obstructed Ygritte’s attempts to lock the door to the bathroom and regain her privacy in the bathroom. Ygritte tried to push the male staff member out of the way and kick his foot out of the way so she could close the door to the bathroom.
 
When Ygritte’s multiple attempts to escape sexually vulnerable and exploitative situations by staff failed, she left the bathroom and attempted to leave the facility by walking out the outside door. Two male staff members followed and restrained her. She told them to stop touching her but they refused. The police arrived and Ygritte told them that she was hearing voices and wanted to hurt people. The police took Ygritte to the hospital for psychological evaluation. She was released from the hospital one hour later. Ygritte was not kept in the hospital because it was determined that she was not a danger to herself or anyone else.

When Ygritte returned, she spoke with her mental health care provider Behavioral Health Clinician Nina Roynoso. According to Supervisor Mark Regan’s written account, “She [Ygritte] expressed to Nina that she had no intention of hurting herself, and that she was wanting some space away from DCS [Direct Care Staff], and to be left alone.”

Ygritte was not a danger to herself or anyone else. Ygritte was in potentially sexually exploitative position with four staff members; three men, and one woman. She took extreme measures to assure the police would be called and she would be taken away from the facility.

All children at all facilities have an expectation that they will be allowed to take a shower or use the bathroom without staff demanding to view their naked body or enter the shower while they are naked or could be naked. Any child in the shower stall should be assumed to be naked, even when the water is not running.

Staff were commended for their professionalism in this incident. According to Supervisor Mark Regan’s written report, “On 12/19/13 a debriefing was held with all involved DCS and Supervisor Regan. The DCS all felt supported during the incident. They were all acknowledged for their professionalism and utilizing their dynamic risk assessment."

Inciting fear of sexual abuse and ignoring fear of sexual abuse in order to coerce behavior is no different to the child than a person expressly threatening to rape them if they do not comply. Entering a shower without reason is a sexually abusive and exploitative situation which cannot be unknown to staff.

Staff justified their behavior by stating that she tried to kill herself approximately a month before this incident when she was living at another group home. Valley of the Moon Children’s Home’s license forbids them from taking children who are a danger to themselves or others. If Ygritte was in immediate danger of harming herself as was suggested in this report, then the Sonoma County Department of Human Services deliberately endangered her life by placing her in a facility which cannot take such children.

Either Valley of the Moon Children’s Home knowingly violated the terms of their license by housing a child they knew was a danger to herself or they lied to justify the use of sexual abuse exploitation as coercion.

Based on the mental health care professional’s assessment, Ygritte was not a danger to herself or others. Any justification to watch her in the bathroom or shower was summarily disproven by the mental health professionals who determined her mental state and potential danger to herself.

As punishment, Ygritte was placed on intensive monitoring which included increased observation of her in her bedroom, bathroom and shower; exploiting the terror of sexual abuse in order to coerce her behavior.
 



[1] Utah Safe Adopt “Child sexual abuse does not always involve physical touching. It can include any experience or attitude imposed on a child that gets in the way of the development of healthy sexual responses or behaviors.” http://bit.ly/SVz1GG
[2] “The erotic use of a child, whether physically or emotionally, is sexual exploitation in the fullest meaning of the term, even if no bodily contact is ever made."
[3] “Sexual abuse can include both touching and non-touching behaviors. … Non-touching behaviors can include voyeurism (trying to look at a child’s naked body), exhibitionism, or exposing the child to pornography. Abusers often do not use physical force, but may use play, deception, threats, or other forms of coercion to engage children and maintain their silence.”
[4] “Violations of bodily privacy - Forcing a child to undress, spying on a child in the bathroom or bedroom” HealthyPlace.com
[5] Parents Protect! http://bit.ly/1wu8hwn
[6] “Parents who are physically abusive may believe that their children need to fear them in order to behave, so they use physical abuse to ‘keep their child in line.’ However, what children are really learning is how to avoid being hit, not how to behave or grow as individuals.” Healthguide.org
[7] Ygritte is the name we assigned the child. Incident Report 7065-8365

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