MISPERCEPTIONS VERSUS FACTS ABOUT
RICHARD A. GARDNER, M.D.
INTRODUCTORY COMMENTS
This document has been prepared to provide corrections for
certain misrepresentations and misperceptions of some of my contributions.
There have been unfortunate misinterpretations of some of my positions
on a variety of issues. Some of these originated from conflicts in
the legal arena, where attorneys frequently select out-of-context material
in order to enhance their positions in a court of law. This is the
nature of the adversary system, and it is one of the causes of the controversy
that sometimes surround my contributions. Some of these misperceptions
and misrepresentations have become so widespread that I considered it judicious
to formulate this statement.
Misperception: Dr. Richard Gardner is biased against
women
Fact: This cannot be reasonably substantiated
by anything I have ever written, lectured on, or testified to in a court
of law. With regard to the alleged gender bias associated with the
parental alienation syndrome, the facts are that I will generally recommend
that PAS-inducing mothers in both the mild and moderate categories retain
primary custody. When PAS is severe, or rapidly approaching the severe
level, and the mother is the primary promulgator, then I recommend a change
of custody. But this represents only a small percentage of cases.
And these are exactly the recommendations I make in my book The Parental
Alienation Syndrome (PAS).
Misperception: Dr. Gardner is an advocate for Men's Rights'
Groups
Fact: I have never been a member of any Men's Rights'
Groups. In fact, I have never been a member of any advocacy group
whatsoever. Many men in men's rights groups are very pleased with
me because I played an important role in bringing to public attention the
false sex-abuse accusation in the context of child-custody disputes and
testified in support of innocent men in this category. However, in
the same groups are many men who are critical of me because they claim
I do not generally recommend custodial change for mothers who have induced
mild and moderate levels of PAS in their children. As mentioned,
I generally reserve such a recommendation for the relatively small percentage
of mothers who have produced very formidable levels of moderate PAS and/or
severe levels of PAS.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner testifies predominantly in support
of men
Fact: There is absolutely no basis for this myth.
I have testified on behalf of women who have been victimized by PAS-inducing
husbands, and I have testified on behalf of men whose wives are PAS inducers.
In fact, in the last few years, the number of PAS-inducing men against
whom I have testified has increased formidably, to the point where I see
the ratio now to be about 50/50.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner is a hired gun
Fact: When I agree to involve myself in a custody litigation
there is a three-step process that each prospective client must take.
First, every attempt must be made to involve me as the court's independent
examiner. If this fails I may be willing, after some exploration
of the case, to be recognized as the inviting party's expert, but I make
no promises beforehand that I will support that party's position.
I require the inviting party to sign a document in which he (she) agrees
to pay my fees, and even for my testimony, if I ultimately decide that
the opposing party warrants my support. There have been cases when
in the course of my evaluation I have concluded that the opposing party's
position is the more compelling one, and I have ultimately testified on
that party's behalf.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's publications are not peer
reviewed
Fact: I have published approximately 150 articles of
which approximately 85 have been in peer review journals.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner has his own publishing company,
Creative
Therapeutics, Inc., and publishes all his books through his own
company
Fact: I do own Creative Therapeutics, Inc., and since
1978 I have published most (but not all) of my books through Creative Therapeutics.
The implication is that Creative Therapeutics is some kind of a vanity
press and that if not for it, I could not find publishers for my books.
The facts are that between 1960 and 1968 I published books with the following
other publishers: Bantam Books -- 4, Jason Aronson, Inc. -- 6, Avon Books -- 1,
Doubleday -- 1, Prentice-Hall -- 2, G. P. Putnam's -- 1. Furthermore, Creative
Therapeutics has not published any of the multiple foreign translations
of my books. In 1991 Bantam published the second edition my book,
The Parents Book About Divorce. Furthermore, I periodically receive
invitations from other publishers to write books. The main reason
why, in recent years, I have published through Creative Therapeutics is
that I have much more autonomy regarding book size and content, and the
returns are more favorable.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner is on the Executive Board
of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation (FMS Foundation)
Fact: I have never been on this board. A review
of any of their periodicals listing membership will support my statement
that I am not included on their Executive Board. I am certainly sympathetic
to the Foundation's position with regard to the belated accusations of
sex abuse by women who have been led by others to believe they were abused
in childhood when there is absolutely no evidence for it. Such sympathy
does not preclude my recognition of the fact that bona fide sex abuse is
a widespread phenomenon and that there are even women who may have limited
recollection of their abuses. I am in agreement with the Foundation's position
that psychotherapy has been oversold to the public, and it is a far less
scientific method of treatment than generally believed. However,
I believe that the Foundation's position on psychotherapy is too stringent
and goes to the point that no form of psychotherapy is considered efficacious.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner believes that pedophiles should
be granted primary custody of their children
Fact: I consider pedophilia to be a psychiatric disorder,
an abominable exploitation of children. I have never supported a
pedophile in his (or her) quest for primary child custody. Because I have
testified on behalf of falsely accused defendants, there are some who claim
that I am reflexively protective of pedophiles and sympathetic to what
they do. There is absolutely nothing in anything I have ever said
or written to support this absurd allegation. When I conclude in
a custody dispute that an accused father has pedophilic tendencies, I will
advise the court to provide protection for the children. I would
certainly not recommend primary custody for such a parent.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner supports and is fully sympathetic
to the practice of pedophilia
Fact: There is absolutely nothing that I have
ever said in any of my lectures, or anything that I have written in any
of my publications to support this allegation. This is my position
on pedophilia: I consider pedophilia to be a form of psychiatric disturbance.
Furthermore, I consider those who perpetrate such acts to be exploiting
innocent victims with little, if any, sensitivity to the potential effects
of their behavior on their child victims. Many are psychopathic,
as evidenced by their inability to project themselves into the position
of the children they have seduced, and ignore the potential future consequences
on the child of their abominable behavior.
Accordingly, we all need protection from pedophiles. Jail is
certainly a reasonable place to provide us with such protection.
This is especially the case because the vast majority of pedophiles are
not going to be cured, or even helped significantly with their problems,
by psychotherapy -- the assertions of some psychotherapists notwithstanding.
By adulthood the pedophilic orientation has been deeply embedded in the
brain circuitry and is not likely to be changed by such a superficial approach
as "talk therapy." Nor is it likely to be changed to a significant
degree by conditioning techniques, i.e., "behavior modification."
It is as reasonable to believe that one could accomplish this goal as it
is to believe that one could change an adult homosexual into a heterosexual
and vice versa.
I am also in favor of Megan's Law, which requires that communities
learn about the presence in their midst of pedophiles who have just been
released from prison. I do believe, however, that the same laws should
be applied to those who have been convicted of certain other crimes such
as rape (which in a sense is similar to pedophilia), murder, arson, and
other felonies that present formidable risks to the community. In
short, I have absolutely no sympathy for pedophiles, and the fact that
I have testified in courts of law in defense of innocent parties -- who have
been wrongly accused of pedophilia -- does not mean that I am in any way sympathetic
to those who actually perpetrate such a heinous crime.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner believes that pedophilia
is a good thing for society
Fact: I believe that pedophilia is a bad thing for society.
I do believe, however, that pedophilia, like all other forms of atypical
sexuality is part of the human repertoire and that all humans are born
with the potential to develop any of the forms of atypical sexuality (which
are referred to as paraphilias by DSM-IV). My acknowledgment that
a form of behavior is part of the human potential is not an endorsement
of that behavior. Rape, murder, sexual sadism, and sexual harassment are
all part of the human potential. This does not mean I sanction these
abominations.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner believes that the vast majority
of incestuous sex-abuse accusations are false
Fact: I believe that the vast majority of incestuous
sex-abuse accusations are true. There are other categories of sex-abuse
accusations, e.g., accusations against babysitters, clergy, scout masters,
teachers, strangers, and accusations in the context of child-custody disputes.
Each category has its own likelihood of being true or false. It is
in the category of child-custody disputes that I believe that the vast
majority of accusations are false, and there is support for this belief
in the scientific literature. This category represents only one of
many, and although false accusations in child-custody disputes is common
practice, this category represents only a small fraction of all groups
combined. When one combines all groups, I hold that the vast majority
of sex-abuse accusations are true.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner is in strong support of the North
American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA)
Fact: I have never been a member of this organization,
and I am opposed to its primary principles. Adult men who have sex
with boys are exploiting them, corrupting them, and contributing to the
development of sexual psychopathology in them. NAMBLA's position is that
if the child consents, then the pedophilic act is acceptable and even desirable.
This is a rationalization for depravity. Children can be seduced
into consenting to anything, including murder. Society needs to protect
itself from those who would exploit our children. Jail is one reasonable
place to provide such protection.
Misperception: The PAS is not a syndrome
Fact: There are some who claim that the PAS is
not really a syndrome. This criticism is especially seen in courts of law
in the context of child-custody disputes. It is an argument sometimes promulgated
by those who claim that PAS does not even exist. The PAS is a very specific
disorder. A syndrome, by medical definition, is a cluster of symptoms,
occurring together, that characterize a specific disease. The symptoms,
although seemingly disparate, warrant being grouped together because of
a common etiology or basic underlying cause. Furthermore, there is a consistency
with regard to such a cluster in that most (if not all) of the symptoms
appear together. Accordingly, there is a kind of purity that a syndrome
has that may not be seen in other diseases.
For example, a person suffering with pneumococcal pneumonia may have
chest pain, cough, purulent sputum, and fever. However, the individual
may still have the disease without all these symptoms manifesting themselves.
The syndrome is more often "pure" because most (if not all) of the symptoms
in the cluster predictably manifest themselves. An example would be Down's
Syndrome, which includes a host of seemingly disparate symptoms that do
not appear to have a common link. These include mental retardation, mongoloid-type
facial expression, drooping lips, slanting eyes, short fifth finger, and
atypical creases in the palms of the hands. There is a consistency here
in that the people who suffer with Down's Syndrome often look very much
alike and most typically exhibit all these symptoms. The common etiology
of these disparate symptoms relates to a specific chromosomal abnormality.
It is this genetic factor that is responsible for linking together these
seemingly disparate symptoms. There is then a primary, basic cause of Down's
Syndrome: a genetic abnormality.
Similarly, the PAS is characterized by a cluster of symptoms that usually
appear together in the child, especially in the moderate and severe types.
These include:
1. A campaign of denigration
2. Weak, absurd, or frivolous rationalizations for the deprecation
3. Lack of ambivalence
4. The "independent-thinker" phenomenon
5. Reflexive support of the alienating parent in the parental conflict
6. Absence of guilt over cruelty to and/or exploitation of the alienated
parent
7. The presence of borrowed scenarios
8. Spread of the animosity to the friends and/or extended family of
the alienated parent
Typically, children who suffer with PAS will exhibit most (if
not all) of these symptoms. This is almost uniformly the case for the moderate
and severe types. However, in the mild cases one might not see all eight
symptoms. When mild cases progress to moderate or severe, it is highly
likely that most (if not all) of the symptoms will be present. This consistency
results in PAS children resembling one another. It is because of these
considerations that the PAS is a relatively "pure" diagnosis that can easily
be made. As is true of other syndromes, there is an underlying cause: programming
by an alienating parent in conjunction with additional contributions by
the programmed child. It is for these reasons that PAS is indeed a syndrome,
and it is a syndrome by the best medical definition of the term.
Misperception: PAS does not exist because it's not in DSM-IV
Fact: There are some, especially adversaries in child-custody
disputes, who claim that there is no such entity as the PAS, that it is
only a theory, or that it is "Gardner's theory." Some claim that I invented
the PAS, with the implication that it is merely a figment of my imagination.
The main argument given to justify this position is that it does not appear
in DSM-IV. The DSM committees justifiably are quite conservative with regard
to the inclusion of newly described clinical phenomena and require many
years of research and publications before considering inclusion of a disorder.
This is as it should be. The PAS exists! Any lawyer involved in child-custody
disputes will attest to that fact. Mental health and legal professionals
involved in such disputes are observing it. They may not wish to recognize
it. They may refer to it by another name (like "parental alienation").
But that does not preclude its existence. A tree exists as a tree regardless
of the reactions of those looking at it. A tree still exists even though
some might give it another name. If a dictionary selectively decides to
omit the word tree from its compilation of words, that does not mean that
the tree does not exist. It only means that the people who wrote that book
decided not to include that particular word. Similarly, for someone to
look at a tree and say that the tree does not exist does not cause the
tree to evaporate. It only indicates that the viewer, for whatever reason,
does not wish to see what is right in front of him (her).
To refer to the PAS as "a theory" or "Gardner's theory" implies the
nonexistence of the disorder. It implies that it is a figment of my imagination
and has no basis in reality. To say that PAS does not exist because it
is not listed in DSM-IV is like saying in 1980 that Lyme Disease did not
exist because it was not then listed in standard diagnostic medical textbooks.
The PAS is not a theory, it is a fact.
But why this controversy in the first place? With regard to whether
PAS exists, we generally do not see such controversy regarding most other
clinical entities in psychiatry. Examiners may have different opinions
regarding the etiology and treatment of a particular psychiatric disorder,
but there is usually some consensus about its existence. And this should
especially be the case for a relatively "pure" disorder such as the PAS,
a disorder that is easily diagnosable because of the similarity of the
children's symptoms when one compares one family with another. Over the
years, I have received many letters from people who have essentially said:
"Your PAS book is uncanny. You don't know me, and yet I felt that I was
reading my own family's biography. You wrote your book before all this
trouble started in my family. It's almost like you predicted what would
happen." Why, then, should there be such controversy over whether or not
PAS exists?
One explanation lies in the situation in which the PAS emerges and
in which the diagnosis is made: vicious child-custody litigation. Once
an issue is brought before a court of law -- in the context of adversarial
proceedings -- it behooves one side to take just the opposite position from
the other if one is to prevail in that forum. A parent accused of inducing
a PAS in a child is likely to engage the services of a lawyer who may invoke
the argument that there is no such thing as a PAS. And if this lawyer can
demonstrate that the PAS is not listed in DSM-IV, then the position is
considered "proven." The only thing this proves is that DSM-IV has not
yet listed the PAS.
Another factor operative in the controversy relates to the false sex-abuse
accusation that is commonly a spin-off of the PAS. It is such a common
problem that there are many who equate PAS with false sex-abuse accusations.
Those who deny the existence of false sex-abuse accusations at the same
time frequently deny the existence of the PAS. Therefore, people who claim
that the PAS exists may find themselves criticized as individuals who do
not believe in the existence of true sex abuse.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner utilizes coercive interview techniques
in which he bludgeons children into saying whatever he wants them to
Fact: I make every attempt to videotape my interviews
of children alleging sexual abuse. I have done hundreds of hours
of such interviews. Not once has anybody been able to demonstrate
coercive interview techniques in the course of these. In fact,
my interviews are often viewed in another room -- via a monitor -- by parents,
lawyers, mental health professionals, and sometimes the child's own therapist.
Not once has anybody ever come forth with the complaint that my interviews
were coercive, even under circumstances in which the parties were able
to interrupt my interview while it was in progress. The interview
tapes are available to both sides and yet not once has an opposing attorney
ever taken such a tape and even tried to demonstrate to the court that
my interview was coercive.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner has been barred from testimony
in many courts of law throughout the United States
Fact: This is pure myth. To date I have testified directly
in approximately 30 states and in others via telephone. I have been
testifying since 1960. Not once has a court of law not recognized
me as an expert.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner claims that he is a Clinical Professor
of Child Psychiatry at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons,
yet he does very little teaching there
Fact: The implication of this statement is that I am
somehow misrepresenting myself. I have been on the faculty of the
Columbia Medical School since 1963. In earlier years I did more teaching
than I have in recent years, but such reduction in teaching obligations
is common for senior medical school faculty members. More importantly,
people who do significant research and writing generally do far less teaching.
This has been my position.
When I was promoted to the rank of full professor in 1983, I was the
first person in the history of Columbia's Child Psychiatry department to
achieve that rank who was primarily in private practice (rather than full-time
faculty). I had to satisfy all the same requirements necessary for
the promotion of full-time academics. And this was also true when
I was promoted to the associate professorial rank some years previously.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's protocols for evaluating sex
abuse are not recognized by the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry
Fact: My protocols not only follow the guidelines delineated
in "Guidelines for Conducting the Sex-Abuse Evaluation" published in 1998
by the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, but my book,
Protocols for the Sex-Abuse Evaluation, is cited as one of the references.
Even more importantly, I was invited to serve as a consultant to the committee
formulating this document.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's sex-abuse protocol has no scientific
validity
Fact: My book Protocols for the Sex-Abuse Evaluation
provides scientific references to the vast majority of the criteria that
I use for differentiating between true and false sex-abuse accusations.
No competent professional has ever claimed in a court of law or in a publication
that any single criterion in this volume lacks scientific validity.
Actually, the criteria that I use are derived from the same literature
that others use when differentiating between true and false accusations.
However, my list of differentiating criteria is generally longer and more
exhaustive than any of the lists I have seen.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's interest in the field
of child sex abuse is probably related to the fact that he himself is tainted
somehow in this realm, e.g., he was sexually abused himself as a child,
or he himself is a sex abuser
Fact: I was never sexually abused as a child.
I have never sexually abused a child, nor have I ever been accused of such
behavior.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's interest in child-custody
disputes probably stems from the fact that he himself was involved in such
a dispute
Fact: I have never been involved in a child-custody dispute involving
my children.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's work is "controversial"
Fact: The implication here is that because controversy
exists there is something specious about my contributions. It is
true that most newly developed scientific principles become "controversial"
when they are dealt with in the courtroom. It behooves the attorneys
to take an opposite stand and create controversy where it does not exist.
This is inevitable in the context of adversarial proceedings. A good
example of this phenomenon is the way in which DNA testing was dealt with
in the OJ Simpson trial. DNA testing is one of the most scientifically
valid procedures. Yet the jury saw fit to question the validity of
such evidence, and DNA became, for that trial, controversial. Those
who discount my contributions because some are allegedly "controversial"
sidestep the real issue, namely, what specifically has engendered the controversy,
and, more importantly, is what I have said reasonable and valid?
The fact that something is controversial does not invalidate it.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner has a publicist
Fact: There was a period of approximately nine months
(fall 1992 to summer 1993) when I did engage the services of a publicist.
The purpose was to bring public attention to one very important case in
which I was involved. That was the only time that I have used the
services of a publicist.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner is extremely expensive and
only represents rich people
Fact: My fees are higher than average, but commensurate
with that of people at my level of experience and expertise. I have
also done a significant amount of pro bono work. At any given point
I usually have one or two pro bono patients for whom I dedicate myself
as assiduously I would had they been paying me. I do not differ here
from many other physicians whose fees from those who can pay enables them
to provide services at low cost -- or even at no cost -- to others.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's work on the PAS and sex
abuse is not generally recognized by the professional communities
Fact: This vague statement does not identify which people
in which professional communities do not recognize my work. As indicated
elsewhere on this website, there are approximately 65 articles published
in scientific journals on the parental alienation syndrome. Furthermore,
institutions in both the legal and mental health realms have invited me
repeatedly to lecture on the PAS and sex abuse, and thousands have attended
my lectures throughout the United States, in Canada and in some countries
abroad.
Misperception: The PAS has not been recognized in courts
of law
Fact: Again, no mention is made regarding which courts
of law. Although there are certainly judges who have not yet recognized
the PAS (I have no hesitation using the word "yet") there is no question
that courts of law with increasing rapidity are recognizing the disorder.
Elsewhere in this website are cited 37 cases in which the PAS has been
recognized. I am certain that there are others which have not been
brought to my attention.
Misperception: The PAS is a discredited theory
Fact: Those who promulgate this myth do not state who
has discredited the PAS and by what authority. The facts are just
the opposite. An ever-increasing number of legal and mental health
professionals are writing articles on the PAS and citing it in courts of
law. These two are cited in this website.
Misperception: Gardner believes that judges, lawyers,
juries, and evaluators who involve themselves in sex-abuse lawsuits become
sexually "turned on" in the course of the litigation
Fact: As the media well knows, sex and violence attract
attention. People are more likely to read about these issues than
less "interesting" topics. To deny prurient interests is to deny
reality. This does not mean that I believe that people are sitting in the
courtroom in a state of high sexual excitation while the trial is going
on.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner believes that everybody
has pedophilic tendencies
Fact: I believe that all people are born with the potential
to engage in every kind of atypical sexual behavior known to humanity.
It behooves parents and other caretakers to suppress socially unacceptable
behavior and to channel the child's sexual urges into socially accepted
forms. This should happen in early childhood. In our society the
pedophilic potential has been suppressed successfully for the vast majority
of individuals. Those who have not experienced such suppression become
pedophiles. There have been other societies in the history of the
world that have not suppressed pedophilic tendencies. The fact that
such suppression has not taken place is a fact of history. This does
not mean that I suggest that we emulate such societies or that I approve
of pedophilia. Human sacrifice has been widespread in many societies
in the history of the world. This also is a fact of history.
To state this fact does not mean that I approve of the practice.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's custody evaluations do
not follow the guidelines delineated by the American Psychological Association
Fact: My child-custody evaluative procedures follow
every one of these guidelines. Those who promulgate this myth do
not say specifically what in these guidelines is not subscribed to by my
child-custody evaluative procedures. In fact, my publications describing
my procedures have been cited in the 1994 American Psychological Association's
"Guidelines for Child Custody Evaluation in Divorce Proceedings." The Guidelines
cite the first edition of my book on the parental alienation syndrome as
well as my 1992 volume True and False Accusations of Child Sex Abuse.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's sex-abuse evaluations
do not follow the guidelines delineated by the American Academy of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry
Fact: Again, those who promulgate this myth do not state
exactly which aspects or elements in my protocol do not follow these guidelines.
The facts are that they do. In 1997 the American Academy of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry published "Practice Parameters for the Forensic
Evaluation of Children and Adolescents Who May Have Been Physically or
Sexually Abused." I was a consultant to the committee that prepared this
document, and my 1992 and 1995 books which describe my protocols are cited
in this document.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's PAS has given abusing parents
the weapon to use against their accusers. Specifically, they deny
their abuse and claim that the children's animosity is the result of the
accuser's programming
Fact: I do not deny that some bona fide abusers are
doing this. The implication of the criticism, however, is that somehow
I am responsible for such misrepresentation of my contribution by these
abusers. PAS exists, as does child abuse. There will always
be those who will twist a contribution for their own purposes. The
second edition of my book The Parental Alienation Syndrome provides evaluators
with detailed criteria for differentiating between true abusers and PAS
indoctrinators.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's work has contributed to
sex-abuse hysteria in this country
Fact: In a way, this is a compliment, because it credits
me with the power to create a national hysteria that did not exist before
my publications. Describing a phenomenon does not mean that I created
it. My book Sex Abuse Hysteria: Salem Witch Trials Revisited was
published in 1991, at least six or seven years after the hysteria began.
(The reader may recall that the McMartin accusations surfaced in 1983 and
the Kelly Michaels accusations in 1988.) Obviously, the sex-abuse
hysteria phenomenon was well under way before the publication of my book.
Misperception: Gardner is responsible for judges all over
the United States and Canada disbelieving mothers claiming that their children
were sexually abused by their husbands. As a result children are
not being protected from their pedophilic fathers
Fact: Again, there is a compliment here in that I, a
single person, could have such an enormous influence over the judiciary
over a whole continent. The alternative explanation, namely, that
my contributions have brought to light the abomination of false sex-abuse
accusations is not acknowledged by those who promulgate this myth.
Misperception: Dr. Gardner's work has resulted in people
committing suicide and homicide
Fact: There is no question that I have been involved
in a few cases in which such tragedies have occurred. I do not differ,
thereby, from the vast majority of other psychiatrists who have been in
full-time practice for over 40 years. The implication here is that
I somehow have been personally responsible for these deaths. Unfortunately,
considerations of confidentiality prevent me from making any public statements
regarding these particular cases. The old adage is applicable here:
"There are two sides to every story." And my side, without revealing
any specific information about any specific case is this: I have never
been involved in a case in which I have been directly responsible for anyone's
suicide or anyone's homicide. And in every such case I could, if
I had the opportunity, provide compelling evidence that these terrible
consequences had absolutely nothing to do with me.
Richard A. Gardner, M.D.
Cresskill, New Jersey
June 9, 1999
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