Showing posts with label Cindy Anthony. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cindy Anthony. Show all posts

Friday, July 1, 2011

The 'bad seed’ diagnosis and the Casey Anthony case











[caption id="attachment_6307" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="Bad tree from Bad Seed"][/caption]








Carol Forsloff - Years ago a famous movie called The Bad Seed depicted a girl seemingly without conscience whose  bad behavior pervaded her relationships, including those with her family, the kind that Casey Anthony is compared to now; but is there such a thing as “a bad seed" in a legal case involving the killing of a child?

The storyline of the film, The Bad Seed, is this, according to the description provided by the creators of the film: “Christine Penmark seems to have it all: a lovely home, a loving husband and the most "perfect" daughter in the world. But since childhood, Christine has suffered from the most terrible recurring nightmare. And her "perfect" daughter's accomplishments include lying, theft and possibly much, much worse. Only Christine knows the truth about her daughter and only Christine's father  knows the truth about her nightmare.”  The film was made in 1956.

Today Casey Anthony is on trial, accused by the prosecution in a death penalty trial in Florida, of killing her two-year-old daughter, Caylee.  Numerous talking heads from law, psychology and the media analyze the elements of the case as it has unfolded in the trial and point to details that mirror the Bad Seed movie script.

But Casey Anthony’s trial is not a movie script, although the screaming “fans” were shown fighting for position to get into the courtroom where the drama of the trial took place.

Cindy Anthony, mother of Casey, is accused of lying to protect her daughter.  Both the defense and the prosecution also point to deceitful ways of Casey’s father, George, as part of the family problems.   Experts from various fields have looked at patterns within the family and report on its dysfunction.  Furthermore the defense in the case maintains that only Casey’s father, outside of Casey herself, knows the truth about what really happened to Caylee.  The details replicate much of the movie’s outline, so what is the nature of “bad seeds” and are there people with inherent tendencies that produce the type of behavior that would lead to killing a child?

The notion that some children are inherently bad is one some mental health professionals support, while others strenuously disagree and maintain dysfunction occurs because of specific types of behaviors a child models in the environment and the constellation of the family.

Amy Webb, Ph.D., examines Dr. Richard Friedman’s contention that some children are badly behaved “because everyday character traits, like all human behavior have hard-wired and genetic components that cannot be molded entirely by the best environment.”  Dr. Friedman is a professor of psychiatry who was interviewed by the New York Times in 2010 to discuss whether or not there is such a thing as a “bad seed.”  He uses the example to show how all other children in a family can be well-behaved but one may stand out as “bad.”

Webb takes exception to Friedman’s argument and says, “I strongly disagree with this idea and I think much of the child development research does too. Yes, children have genetic predispositions towards a lot of characteristics, both physical and psychological. However, this is just a predisposition, not fate. Much of what determines how a predisposition is expressed depends on how parents, teachers, and others in the environment react to the child.”

One of the most prevalent explanations for the type of behavior that leads to  a“bad seed” is one advanced by Dr. David Lykken.  He maintains that psychopaths are distinctly different than other people beginning in childhood and don't respond with normal inhibition.  He also says that most antisocial behaviors where the child seemingly has no conscience and exhibits antisocial behavior is actually caused by poor parenting, absentee fathers and inadequate mothers as a usual pattern.

Parents with poor child-rearing abilities will respond inadequately or inappropriately during the time the child is being socialized.  Lykken suggests the child often irritates them, and the child then acts out.   Although there have been research studies using twins to assess criminality,  Lykken acknowledges that it is true twins raised separately  may each have a criminal-type behavior, showing aggression and sensation seeking, but that these behaviors can be channeled into doing good or bad things.  It is up to the parents to guide the child in making the right choices.

In addition to the psychological and psychiatric debates, neurologists point to brain activities that suggest psychopaths have brain activities that are abnormal.  Consequently those afflicted with this neurological pattern end up doing things that excite the nervous system, thus becoming involved in thrill-seeking activities.

Bad seed theories examine  the various mechanisms that are intertwined in creating violent behavior.   A cogent explanation on how a Gary Gilmore or a Dennis Nilsen, both serial killers, can become seriously violent is through a process that seems to most promote antisocial behavior is advanced by Psychologist Lonnie Athen.  She tells us that such a person,"is a victim of violence and feels powerless to avoid it. Then he is taught how and when to become violent and to profit from it. Then he acts on that. If a person from a violent environment does not become violent, it is because some part of the process is missing.”

The Anthony family has been outlined by experts following the trial as having serious dysfunction and patterns of deception, while the defense maintains the father, George Anthony, molested his daughter throughout her childhood, a type of violent behavior that is conducive to developing antisocial  behavior.   The lack of coherent testimony about various details related to the death of two-year-old Caylee reflects the differences within the family core.

Experts differ on the specifics of how antisocial behavior develops and the bad seed theories that proliferate in cases like that of Casey Anthony, but they all agree that there is such a thing as an antisocial person seemingly without conscience who can have an outwardly normal appearance and a family the face of propriety that can lead to violence and murder.  The clinical enumeration of those “bad seed” behaviors can be found here, in a summary of the traits defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, the text used for diagnosing and classification of mental disorders.





Monday, June 20, 2011

Maternal parenting dysfunction in Florida murder case

[caption id="attachment_5983" align="alignleft" width="214" caption="Criminal -profiling expert, Kim Iannetta--Trialrun"][/caption]

Carol Forsloff - Handwriting analysis is often criticized for its lack of scientific foundation and the lack of serious study found in its application in the courts, but Kim Iannetta has solidified her work in recognizing dangerousness in writing in an advanced way  as she examines the murder case against Casey Anthony and the role of  Casey's mother, Cindy, in the development of her daughter’s dysfunctional patterns.

Iannetta has practiced handwriting analysis for nearly fifty years.  During that time she attained a reputation for her superior ability in pinpointing the deviance of different individuals who have mental illness or criminal behavior.    To solidify that reputation,  years ago she participated in a scientific study at Hawaii State Hospital where her analyses of psychiatric patients were found to correlate significantly with those of professionals in psychology and psychiatry.

Over the years Iannetta has been admired for her uncanny ability to assess specific behavioral  characteristics of people through her system of profiling.  Her book, Danger Between the Lines, is used by security departments, police officers, detectives, psychologists and others in the mental health or security professions as a tool to assess dangerousness in clients or crooks.

One of the most famous cases in Hawaii  that utilized Iannetta’s proficiencies, was one involving former Chief of Police Gibbs and a threatening letter.  Police were trying to determine the letter’s author because of the potential danger from those threats.   Iannetta was asked to identify the writer, and to do so she used techniques of both document examination and behavioral analysis, two specialties in which she has expertise.   Working with the police Iannetta used writing samples from the Department of Motor Vehicles in Hawaii and identified the writer of the threatening letter, leading to criminal experts in security, law and behavioral sciences to rely upon her work in future cases.

In the case of Casey Anthony, the mother accused of killing her daughter Caylee in a high profile trial being followed by millions of people around the world, Iannetta has examined the  elements of it  as well as handwriting samples that have been printed in the Orlando newspapers.  Her careful eye for detail and her ability to synthesize data from a variety of sources has allowed her  to make a reasonable estimate about serious problems within the Anthony family.  Parenting problems helped form the personality of a daughter who could lie without apparent emotion and be involved in a murder as heinous as the one of Caylee Anthony, the tot allegedly  killed by her mother,  Casey, according to the prosecution in this case.

What Iannetta has concluded is the Anthonys to be a dysfunctional family in its broadest and most classic sense.  The core of lying behavior is seen in Cindy Anthony, a cold, distant and punitive mother of Casey, whose need to  look good even when circumstances are bad led to a pattern of manipulation and deceit within the family constellation.  It is the reason Casey Anthony might lie about the death of her child and continue to fabricate more and more stories over time, each different in focus than the other and each revealing how the Anthony patterns of deceit have been dramatized at their worst.

Iannetta examined the  writing of all family members, however this article looks primarily at the assessment of Cindy Anthony whom Iannetta describes as having personality defects that helped set the stage for Casey's acting out behavior and potential to kill  Caylee.   Iannetta strongly believes in the American system of justice of innocence until proven guilty and theorizes that Casey could have killed her daughter accidentally, then covered up the crime.  But Iannetta’s focus has been to look at the  individual members of the family to hypothesize about the motivation for their behaviors as opposed to making a judgment about the guilt or innocence of Casey specific to killing Caylee.

Iannetta at the outset tells us, “This is a very dysfunctional family, “ then goes on to describe Cindy Anthony as the foundation for much of that dysfunction.

[caption id="attachment_5984" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="Cindy Anthony handwriting"][/caption]

“In looking at Cindy’s writing, one can observe the characteristics thsat show her to be  conventional, organized, a doer, but someone for whom appearances are more important than substantive truth.  When things don’t look right, she can lie and make up stories, something that is said to have become a pattern in her daughter Casey’s life.

Cindy’s focus with her family is to hurry to make things right.  Her writing reveals a lack of empathy for real feelings to be expressed.   While her husband, George, relies on her for family connections; it wouldn’t be surprising to learn he had affairs because of Cindy’s over-riding conventional concerns and lack of warmth.

It’s in the relationship with her daughter Casey that Cindy’s handwriting gives evidence of control, jealousy and lack of warmth in maternal parenting behavior.   She has likely been jealous of the emotional ties between her husband, George, and Casey, as it is likely Casey got her affection mostly from her father.  That jealousy has led to more lies in order to cover up the family problems now revealed in the murder trial against Casey.  Casey, immature, and narcissistic, needed to get free.

The tragedy, Iannetta concludes,  does not just come from in the constellation of the family dynamics, but those that have taken place outside the courtroom as well.  That too is a type of dysfunction Iannetta sees in a culture that has not strayed far from those maddening crowds of long ago that enjoyed the spectacle of gladiator games when folks were killed.  “We need to remember Casey is on trial for her life, and any addition I am making to the understanding in this case is done in order to help folks recognize how family patterns can lead to awful things, as happened in the case of the Anthony family, where one of its members is facing a murder conviction and the death penalty.”



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Handwriting examples provided by Trialrun:

[caption id="attachment_5988" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="Casey Anthony writing"][/caption]











[caption id="attachment_5989" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="Casey Anthony signature"][/caption]











[caption id="attachment_5991" align="alignleft" width="244" caption="George Anthony"][/caption]