Anonymous wrote:Please be there for your friend. She has lost her job, her son, her support. She is stuck in the house with a bad husband, a perverted son and a lot of shame. She didn’t do it and I doubt she knew about it. I actually suspect - based on your description of the change in this young man - that he is probably mentally I’ll and that’s why the parents had let him live with them. There are a lot of mental illnesses that show up in young adulthood. Of course, that doesn’t excuse the CP, but it may help explain why they were supporting him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would suggest some kind of therapy. This situation is a lot to unpack. Did the parents secure an attorney since this all occurred in their home using their internet?
+1000
OP, you can certainly support your friend via phone. I'd highly recommend therapy for your friend. Your friend may need some pharmaceutical support drugs from her primary care physician.
It is pretty common for families with means to bail out their children that are accused of murder, pedo, etc and to provide legal support until the money runs out. Your friend is probably in denial right now. Everyone wants their kid to have a lawyer and not a public defender.
Porn is addictive and endemic in our society. It is not caused by the parents.
Your friend's son is a grown man. No parent is policing their grown son's web surfing.
It is understandable since she works with children but unfortunate that she lost her job two years before she was going to retire.
My boyfriend had an employee who ended up doing time in federal prison for CP. I believe he was sentenced to 15 years and ended up
doing 10 years in federal prison. He was released as a broken man. I believe he is on social security disability and living with his mother in a trailer and can't leave the county as condition of his parole. My boyfriend knew the wife and children of the accused. We supported the wife and
also the children of the accused (youngest was around 5). It was the right thing to do. They needed the support. We also live in a small town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not convinced someone can become a pedo in a vacuum. Did you ever get “off” vibes from her or his father?
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Pedophiles (and rapists, and domestic abusers) can be very very good at manipulating others and crafting a very likable, harmless persona. That’s why so few victims are believed. It is by design.
-molested by dad, yet my family believes him over me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not convinced someone can become a pedo in a vacuum. Did you ever get “off” vibes from her or his father?
-1
Pedophiles (and rapists, and domestic abusers) can be very very good at manipulating others and crafting a very likable, harmless persona. That’s why so few victims are believed. It is by design.
-molested by dad, yet my family believes him over me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With her being an educator doesn't having him in her home jeopardize her CPS clearance and teaching license? I'd certainly be concerned if my child's teacher lived with a pedophile.
OP said that she was forced to retire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With her being an educator doesn't having him in her home jeopardize her CPS clearance and teaching license? I'd certainly be concerned if my child's teacher lived with a pedophile.
OP said that she was forced to retire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would suggest some kind of therapy. This situation is a lot to unpack. Did the parents secure an attorney since this all occurred in their home using their internet?
+1000
Anonymous wrote:With her being an educator doesn't having him in her home jeopardize her CPS clearance and teaching license? I'd certainly be concerned if my child's teacher lived with a pedophile.
Anonymous wrote:She is reaching out to me in hopes of some sort of support but I’m scared. I do want to support her, but I have nothing positive to say about her son and I think she wants to hear that he’s a good person, that he is just making mistakes.