Curriculum Vitae
Michael G. Brock, MA, LLP, LMSW
Counseling and Evaluation Services
Gage Building, 2514 Biddle Avenue,
Cell phone/Voicemail (313) 802‑0863,
Fax/Phone (734) 692‑1082
Email: michaelgbrock@comcast.net
Website: michaelgbrock.com
EDUCATION:
BA 1974, MA 1980 Wayne State
University, Detroit, Michigan.
LICENSURE:
1.
Current Limited Licensed Psychologist (permanent Master's level), since
1981.
2.
Licensed Master Social Worker (highest level) State of Michigan, since
1983.
PROFESSIONAL
AFFILIATIONS:
Michigan Association of
Professional Psychologists, Member, and Member of the Board of Directors.
RELEVANT
FORENSIC EXPERIENCE:
2/95 ‑ presently I
have a full‑time private practice at Brock Counseling and Evaluation in
Wyandotte. The vast majority of my cases at this time are:
·
Court
Ordered Psychological Evaluations and Recommendations for Custody (approx. 400
done to date)
·
Taped
forensic interviews of children suspected of being abused
·
Mediations
·
Parenting
Coordinator Appointments
·
Driver
Assessment and Appeal Division Evaluations
·
Domestic
Violence Evaluation and Treatment
·
As
part of these evaluations, I have often had to assess the credibility of
allegations of physical or sexual abuse.
The most important aspect of this task is to obtain a proper, videotaped
forensic interview with the child, alleged perpetrator, and complaining party,
and to follow the chain of evidence in order to determine the degree of
contamination.
·
More
recently, I have done case preparation or treatment in a few criminal
cases. I have done substance abuse
evaluations since 1974, and have found that the most useful information in
these cases is usually provided by persons other than the substance abuser;
typically consisting of a cluster of psychosocial symptoms which are highly
indicative of substance dependence.
NON-FORENSIC PRACTICE:
·
I
still do a small amount of General Practice work, Marital and Family
Counseling, and work with Adolescents.
·
I
also do the psychological evaluations for the City of Ecorse Police and Fire
Departments.
·
1/85
‑ 2/95 Practice at Downriver Guidance Clinic, and with Dr. Young Kwon,
Southgate, Michigan.
·
2/95
– 2/98 General practice at Evergreen Counseling Center.
·
1/77
‑ 1/83 Substance abuse therapist at Garden City Hospital and Hegira
Alcohol Treatment Center, wrote and conducted didactic sessions on the Disease
Concept of Alcoholism, group and individual therapy.
OTHER EXPERIENCE:
Academic advisor WSU 1975‑1977,
pro baseball player, 1965 and 1968. Military Police, US Army 1966‑1968
(honorable discharge).
PERSONAL:
Born 9/20/46 (59), 6' 3", 220 Ibs. Good health. Single, 24-yr-old daughter.
PUBLICATIONS:
From March 2000-present I
have written a monthly article for:
THE DETROIT LEGAL NEWS; AND
THE OAKLAND COUNTY LEGAL NEWS.
The following articles are a
partial list of topics covered in monthly articles published over the last few
years regarding treatment, forensic work, and related subjects in these publications:
Professional Case
Preparation
More and more scientific evidence,
or quasi-scientific evidence, is being presented in the court, and the courts
tend to place a high degree of credibility in these reports, regardless of
whether the report merits such credibility.
In fact, courts routinely allow evidence which both the American Medical
Association and the American Psychological Association have deemed is
unreliable. But how is one to
distinguish between good and bad science..?
The Pitfalls of Expert
Testimony
Recently the Michigan Supreme Court rules committee voted
to recommend seriously limiting the nature and amount of testimony that could
be given by an expert witness…This is a good thing…Unfortunately, the new rules
regarding who can testify in the court, or the limits of opinions expressed by
these experts, will not change the most grievous errors made by members of our
profession…
Why
Forensic Interviews Favor the Accuser
Protocol is not followed from the beginning
interview, which often consists of leading questions by parents and rarely
includes a narrative, which is the best form of evidence in these
cases…Forensic interviews never end: the accuser can keep making allegations
until they find someone who believes them...
When Abuse
Allegations Are Valid
...It is generally agreed among
mental health professionals that sexual abuse is more damaging than almost any
other abuse that can be inflicted on a child, short of permanent physical
disfigurement or debilitating injury…Both men and women who have been sexually
abused experience profoundly damaged self-esteem. They tend to blame themselves, feeling deeply guilty and ashamed,
thinking they must have done something wrong to bring on the abuse…The victim’s
sense of boundaries is profoundly affected.
In most cases they have been exploited by someone whose job it was to
protect them, totally violating their sense of security and safety....
Diagnosing
Substance Abuse in Forensic Cases
The two most useful instruments for diagnosing alcoholism and alcohol
abuse are 1. The reports of significant others, and 2. The psychosocial construct of
symptoms associated with the condition.
Family members often give information confirmatory of abuse and/or
alcoholism, even though they may not realize at the time. Such symptoms are...
Nurture
vs. Structure
Rarely can it be said of an entire society that everyone
missed the boat. Even when it is said,
it is rarely the case. Yet there are
some ideas that take hold of a culture that are very wrong and do great harm, but
no one seems to get it—at least at the time.
To say that I have discovered such a case of universally accepted error
seems even to myself to be presumptuous, yet I believe it to be true…
The
Need to Discern Valid from Invalid Scientific Evidence
…Medical and/or
other scientific evidence decides an increasing number of legal cases;
especially abuse cases in which the children are not old enough to testify
themselves. It seems unlikely, however,
that the state will follow the AMA recommendation that every effort be made to
hire objective experts, preferably having them selected by the court. To do so is not the customary method of
proceeding in our adversarial system.
Moreover, it takes power out of the hands of the attorneys on both sides
of the case to influence the outcome.
Judges, who are lawyers also, are unlikely to make a decision that they
would perceive as limiting the ability of attorneys to present their case…
Ethical
Issues and Relations with the Legal Profession
APA Guidelines For Child Custody
Evaluations (Excerpts)…The Psychologist avoids multiple relationships. Psychologists generally avoid conducting a
child custody evaluation in a case in which the psychologist served in a
therapeutic role for the child or his or her immediate family or has other
involvement that may compromise the psychologist’s objectivity…The psychologist
does not give any opinion regarding the psychological functioning of any
individual who has not been personally evaluated…Code Of Ethics Of The National
Association Of Social Workers (Excerpts) Conflicts of Interests…Social workers
should be alert to and avoid conflicts of interest that interfere with the
exercise of professional discretion and impartial judgment…Social workers
should not engage in dual or multiple relationships with clients or former
clients in which there is a risk of exploitation or potential harm to the
client…
Forensic
Interviewing In Sex Abuse Cases: the State of the Art
In the book, Investigative Interviews of Children,
the basis for the Michigan Protocol for Interviewing Children Suspected of
Abuse, the authors, Drs. Deborah Poole and Michael Lamb, report the following
distinctions between forensic and non-forensic interviewing beginning at P.
106: "…Many professionals who work
with children were trained primarily to provide services after the need for
intervention had already been identified…the underlying assumptions of
therapeutic interviews often undermine or contradict those that guide
investigative interviews, and thus most authors warn against professionals
assuming dual roles with individual clients…"
Parental
Alienation
…The majority of these
cases—at least the ones that result in legal action—involve a deliberate
attempt to remove the child from contact with the target parent for reasons
that address the needs of the parent doing the alienating, rather than the
child. The motivation for this
alienation is usually either the convenience of the alienating parent, or a
willingness to use the children to inflict revenge on a hated ex-spouse…
Treatment
Professionals Beware
…Much
has been written on the legal and ethical reasons treatment professionals ought
not to provide evidence in court. Essentially, the reasons are that in most
cases it is both bad psychology and bad law.
Because a treating therapist develops a therapeutic alliance with his
client, the treatment professional is not equipped offer objective
testimony. Furthermore, satisfactory
evidence to support a treatment diagnosis is woefully inadequate under current
forensic standards…
What
Fathers Need to Know About Parenting
…We should never make the mistake of thinking that
we will let mom have all the responsibility of caring for children when they
are babies and we will start interacting with them when they are older, less
trouble and more fun. The most
important bonding occurs during a child’s first year of life. If we miss it, we may yet develop a good
relationship with that child, but the bond will never be what it could have
been. Plus, the child’s brain development
is most active in the first three years of life. If the child is well nurtured during this time period, he or she
is most likely to develop to their full mental and emotional potential. Therefore, getting involved in our
children’s lives as early as possible cannot be over-emphasized…
Let
the Children Have A Voice
…The question of whether the child will have a voice in such cases is an
important one. Most of the forensic
psychologists that I have talked to believe that the children's opinions should
be offered to the court and the attorneys in the report. I agree.
Which of us would feel that we had received due process if we were not
allowed in the courtroom and not provided with legal representation in a
process that is ostensibly intended to serve our best interests?
The
Strategy of False Allegations
…It is not hard to
achieve the complete brainwashing of a child in these circumstances. The research…on child development has
concluded that children between the ages of three and five years old cannot
clearly distinguish what they remember from what they have been told they
remember. Actually, this information is
not new; Jean Piaget, considered to be the father of developmental psychology,
pointed it out anecdotally in Play, Dreams, and Imitation back in 1962
(when he) related a story of his own abduction from—and subsequent rescue
by—his nanny. He reports having a very
vivid recollection of the incident. The
only problem was that it had never happened; it turned out to have been a hoax,
perpetrated by his nanny for the apparent purpose of ingratiating herself to
Piaget’s parents. Later in life she got
religion and felt the need to confess the lie in a letter to his parents. So, Piaget had a vivid recollection of
something he later learned had never happened…
To
Tell the Truth
…Despite the fact that
the American Psychological Association position paper on the polygraph puts its
reliability at 61% (Or 11% higher than a random guess), attorneys, prosecutors,
police and the general public continue to place a high degree of credibility
upon this measure of physiological stress responses to probative questions…
Sex
Crimes, Forensic Truth and Videotape
Anger
Management: Some Old Ideas About A Hot Topic
The ability to develop negotiation skills is essential to being able to
meet one’s own needs in a socially acceptable manner. The “win-win” philosophy is a concept that anyone involved in
negotiations (like psychologists and lawyers) as part of their work takes for
granted, yet it is a novel concept for many who have been raised in an
environment where there was always a winner who got what they wanted and a
loser who rarely did. If a person can
develop the notion that “both of us can get our needs met if we talk it out”,
they are less likely to resort to force out of fear that it is the only way to
win. But as Dr. Abraham Low said,
“Temper blocks insight”, so we need to “drop the temper, while expressing the
feeling (concern)…”
MRE
703, The Effects of the Rule Change on Expert Testimony in Family Court
…Legally then, there is still a gap between what is deemed to be ethical
mental health practice by our own ethics codes, and what is permissible
testimony under law. And it is not that
the law does not recognize the difference between treatment and investigation;
the child protection statute mandates that investigations conducted by State
employees follow a protocol adopted by the State for such purposes. Unfortunately, the law does not yet cover
all mental health practitioners working independently or in free-standing
clinics, so these investigations disguised as therapy continue to be legal for
those who don’t know they are unethical, while they are illegal for those who
know the difference…Time for another rule change?
False
Allegations of Sexual Abuse: What Can Be Done
…One insightful judge
asked a treatment professional, who was testifying in a case in which I was
involved, why the mother and child were doing treatment for a problem which had
to do with the father’s relationship with the child. The obvious answer was that what was going on was not treatment
at all, but investigation. But a fair
investigation also involves an attempt to obtain information from all parties
involved. Treatment professionals in
these cases see themselves as having a responsibility to “crack the case” by
getting the child to admit the abuse that everyone knows happened. They often put enormous pressure on a child
over an extended period of time to disclose, and children often cave in under
such pressure…
The
Therapist As Advocate
…Judge
William Giovan of the 3rd Circuit Court in Wayne County, Michigan
has stated that the main reason for his campaign to revise MRE 703 was to get
rid of this meaningless, costly and time-consuming misuse of the Courts’ time
and resources. If the mental health
professional has a role in the Courts, it is as the Court’s expert who is there
to provide objective evidence.
Providing a partisan argument is the lawyer’s domain…
Parental
Alienation II: Why Common Sense Doesn’t Work
Current Standards for Driver License Renewal Evaluations
The
New SUBSTANCE ABUSE EVALUATION (ALCOHOL AND DRUGS) AND REQUEST FOR HEARING
requests far more information than previously sought by evaluators handling
these cases. It also affords hearing
officers the authority to reach conclusions about clients they have not done
sufficient evaluation to assess, such as mental health diagnosis and its impact
on sobriety. Moreover, they may not be
qualified to offer an opinion on the subject if they had. Since the opinions issued by these officers
do not contain their credentials, or even their first names, it is hard to know
what they are qualified to determine.
However, in addition to the information traditionally asked for in
substance abuse evaluations, the DAAD is currently requiring…
Recovery
Inc.: The Best Kept Secret I Know
…Most people are very familiar with the success of groups such as
Alcoholics Anonymous and the many spin-off groups that are based on the 12-step
model. What surprises me is that more
people are not aware of the most effective support group I have found for
treating anxiety and depressive neurosis, and even more serious forms of these
conditions. The group I am referring to
is Recovery, Inc…
The
Most Committed Wins (The Psychology of War)
Acquiring
Forensic Expertise
The
Pendulum or the Polarization?
Seemed
Like a Good Idea
What
Is the Prosecutor’s Motive?
"When I wrote it, nobody contemplated the mother
cooperatively participating in the beating of herself to kill the unborn
child. We’d simply change the law and
under those circumstances, the mother would be chargeable.” So Amber Hunt Martin quotes State Rep. Bill
Van Regenmorter, R-Georgetown Township in her Feb. 7, 2005 Detroit Free Press
article entitled, Legislator Seeks Change in Prenatal Protection Act…Martin
reports that Regenmorter plans to rework the law and present it to the House by
mid March for approval. However,
getting approval for a revised bill will not be the slam-dunk that Regenmorter
seems to think. Anyone who supports a
woman’s right to an abortion is going to be reluctant to support a bill that in
anyway limits that right…To illustrate, Martin quotes Renee Chelian, executive
director of Northland Family Planning Centers.
‘“I would definitely be looking to see any impact on a woman trying to
have a legal abortion, no matter what method is used,” said Chelian, pointing
to women who induce their own abortions, such as with morning-after pills…’”
Therapy
Court
Somewhere in America, today, somewhere in Michigan,
or most likely, in several places in Michigan, court is in session. The presiding judge is not really a judge
and has no legal training. He is not
even a lawyer, nor has he made any effort to study the applicable law. Nonetheless, there are no laws or (enforced)
ethics codes preventing him from trying this type of case. It has not occurred to him, or even to much
of the legal community that it is wrong for him to do so, so why should he
concern himself? He doesn’t even call
this a court, but it is very much a court of law, and the stakes are very
high. At issue is the termination of
parental rights…
What
Forensic Psychology Has to Teach Us About Treatment
…Forensic
research and practice have taught us that we cannot always count on the
presenting parent to provide us with accurate information about the child or
his condition because the parent sometimes has a need to view the child’s problem
in a way that is beneficial to them. We
also have discovered that children are very susceptible to being led during
interviews by either parental coaching or interviewer bias, and that repeated
or leading questioning will suggest to the child that their responses were not
what the interviewer expected to hear; they are the “wrong” answers. The best evidence in forensic cases comes
from establishing a rapport with a child (as we would with any other client),
and seeking a free narrative from the child concerning the events about which
we are concerned. If this is true in
forensic work, it begs the question, is this not also a good idea in other
forms of mental health involvement, specifically treatment?…
How
Much Government is too Much?
…Moreover, has the
State really improved Cassandra’s life by removing her from her nuclear and
extended family? The State has not
succeeded in controlling the Cassandra’s outbursts, and my information is that
they have found it necessary to use a degree of force to subdue the child
forbidden to the parents. Can the State
really supply this child anything that her family and extended family
cannot? There is a substantial body of
literature which shows that children tend to fare much better in intact and
even single parent families than they do in foster care and State institutions,
especially children who age out of foster care…
The
Need to Adopt Forensic Protocol
On January 6,
2006 I proposed to the Board of the Michigan Association of Professional
Psychologists (MAPP) that we, as an organization, adopt the State of Michigan
Governor’s Task Force on Children’s Justice and Family Independence Agency
Forensic Interviewing Protocol. This protocol may be found at
http://www.michigan.gov/documents/FIAPub779_13054_7.pdf. It was developed by
Central Michigan University’s Deborah Poole PhD, a nationally recognized
researcher in the field of forensic psychology and, specifically, conducting
children’s interviews, and a team of professionals working in various
capacities relating to the disposition of allegations of abuse in this State.
This protocol is mandatory for police, prosecutors, protective services
workers, and interdisciplinary teams including police, prosecutors and mental
health professionals conducting child interviews in suspected abuse cases for
the State…
Evidence
of the Need for a Rule Change?
…The loophole
in the law, or contradiction between law and professional ethics/standards of
practice, and case law/court rules and statute, which I envisioned at that
time, and which would allow bad evidence in regardless of all the safeguards
put in place to insure that just this sort of thing would not happen, has
become a reality. Someone must now
stand trial on the strength of nothing more than a parent’s allegation. I ask again, is it time for another rule
change?
Evidence
of the Need for a Rule Change II
…Everywhere in Michigan, the Child Protection Law
mandates that police and prosecutors are trained to and must do forensic
interviews in these cases following Michigan Protocol. Sadly,
police, prosecutors and the social workers who investigate these
matters for DHS are required by law to practice proper forensic
techniques, while other healthcare providers are not. Valid evidence
comes from these videotaped interviews,
and they form the basis of criminal prosecution. The fact that there was
no criminal prosecution suggests to me there is no such evidence. If,
despite this, a court action is allowed to go forward, then all it takes to
make anyone face criminal or civil liability is a malicious or hysterical
parent. That is not acceptable.
Blaming
the Victim
Michigan
law states clearly that an adult who has sexual intercourse with a person who
is between the ages of 13 and 16 is guilty of 3rd degree criminal
sexual conduct. The law does not consider this a
“technicality” to be negated by a consideration of whether or not the sexual
activity was consensual…The motivation for doing so is clearly not legal, but
political…Children of this age are dealing with issues of self-esteem,
peer-group pressures (e.g., to use alcohol and drugs) and the desire to belong,
and scholastic and career path choices.
In addition to learning to deal with sexual feelings accompanying rapid
hormonal changes, there are other significant physiological changes taking
place, including the development of the brain’s frontal lobe, which apparently
does not keep pace with sexual development…Michigan’s
statute is intended to give children a few precious years in which they may
come to understand these responsibilities before they can be exploited by older
adults who do understand these consequences for the child, but selfishly
disregard them in pursuit of their own pleasure. Our laws clearly say that this exploitation is criminal, and not
just a minor crime (or technicality if you will), but a felony…
Whores,
Pimps and the Judiciary
Attorneys with whom I have worked as a forensic mental
health expert sometimes like to needle me about being a whore. Of course, they say it with a good-natured
smile, but we both know they mean it.
Sometimes I let it go, but sometimes I smile good-naturedly and say,
“Well, it may be true that all the whores in our business are mental health
experts, but all the pimps are lawyers.”
They laugh, but of course, they know that I mean it too. In the relationship between the whore and
the pimp, everyone knows that it is the pimp who has the power, and so it is in
the Courts. Pimps like whores because
they can exercise power over them that they could not have in a healthy relationship. Whores, for one reason or another, have a
need to be exploited. At worst, they
are addicts or people who have emotional disabilities or believe they have no
other realistic choice. Of course, in
our business it means that their opinions—and hence their integrity—are for
sale…
Hypothetical Questions For Cross Examining Mental
Health Witnesses In Sex Abuse Cases
Recently I was asked by an attorney in another state
to provide some potential questions for cross-examining mental health
experts in a sex abuse allegation case.
The persons being interviewed were the treating therapist, whose
recommendation was based solely on the mother’s allegation of abuse, and
someone who had been hired to do an “extended” post-forensic interview.
Both of these tactics are still commonly employed by prosecutors or
others involved in the forensic interviewing process when they are not happy
with the evidence obtained through legitimate means.
The fact that this process of incorporating sexist and intentionally
biased evidence into legitimate legal process is still routine should give
anyone genuinely concerned about achieving due process for men accused of
these crimes the willies. It
does me. Of course, these
represent possible questions and could be reworded or rephrased to suit the
needs of the case…
PUBLICATIONS
IN THE MICHIGAN LAWYER’S WEEKLY
12/23/2002:
Fit Parents Shouldn’t Have to Fight to Parent Own Kids; 7/22/2002: What’s
Wrong with a Presumption of Equality? 3/12/2001: The Pitfalls of Expert
Testimony; 2/15/99: Due Process: Good Psychology in Cases Involving
Children; 1/11/99: Using Mediation during Child Custody Evaluations.
MICHIGAN
ASSOCIATION OF PROFESSIONAL PSYCHOLOGISTS NEWSLETTER
10/98: Ken Starr and Confidentiality; 6/03: Treatment
Professional Beware
THE NEWS‑HERALD
NEWSPAPER
Self-Help
Group is the Best Kept Secret; Tips for Parents: Suppress anger, Set Examples;
Love Means Having to Say You're Sorry; Addictive Love Can Be Harmful, Not
Romantic; Middle Ground ‑ Self-Acceptance is A Fine Line; Oedipus Story
Is A Far Reaching One; There is No Values ‑ Free Counseling; Prevention
is the Key to Drug Abuse.
PRESENTATIONS:
2/12/2002
Seminar—Custody Cases and Evaluations. Presented with the Hon. Bill
Callahan to the Dearborn/Downriver Detroit Bar Assn. Focus on recognizing and encouraging proper use of mental health
forensic evidence in the courtroom.
June
2001 Presentation—What Fathers Need to Know About Parenting: To the
Wayne County Head Start Male Conference, the focus of this conference and presentation
was on raising male consciousness regarding the responsibilities and rewards to
fathers of involvement in the parenting process.
12/8/2000
Seminar—Divorce and Child Custody Cases: Models of Behavior for Mental
Health Professionals. Presented
with the Hon. Bill Callahan, Judge of the 3rd Circuit Court, this
seminar covered the concept of due process of law; how due process is suspended
in child abuse cases; the intrinsic understanding of human psychology inherent
in due process; protocol for conducting child abuse interviews; distinguishing
between parental needs and the best interests of the child; assessing
credibility of child witnesses; the use of anatomical dolls; developmental
limitations of children’s recall; penalties for false allegations of abuse and
why they are not enforced; and standards of practice. Handbook of Child Custody Evaluations made available for
seminar.
1990
‑ Present multiple presentations on the above subject matter at various
Downriver Schools, churches, and civic groups.
IMPORTANT SEMINARS AND ADVANCED TRAINING:
Ethics
and Stress Management, Advanced
Training Associates,
9/19/2008
,
Jackson
MI. Update on current standards
of ethical behavior for mental health professionals, as well as a discussion
of stress management techniques for both treatment and personal use.
Certified
Sex Offender Treatment Specialist, Training and Certification,
National Association of Forensic Counselors,
June 16-20, 2008
,
Ann Arbor
Michigan
. Seminar highlighted current
strategies in treating perpetrators of sexual crimes, including use of the
polygraph as a therapeutic tool and aversion therapy.
Parental
Alienation, Dr. Joan
Kelly PhD,
4/24/2008
,
Birmingham
MI
. The focus of this seminal was
on the need to make distinctions between a child who is being deliberately
alienated and one who has an aversion to seeing a parent because of that
parent’s inappropriate behavior, or lack of interest or parenting skills;
including suggested treatment options for individual/family therapy.
Self-Destructive Emotions – MI
, Nicholas R. S. Hall
PhD, 4/27/2007
,
Lansing
MI
. This seminar dealt the need to help the client identify
self-destructive emotions and, though positive self-talk and other techniques, empower clients safeguard
their mental health and not allow the negative emotions to create a downward spiral from which it becomes
increasingly difficult to escape.
Law and
Ethics; Things a Clinician Needs to Know, Presented by Patrick L. DeChello PhD, on 9/9/2005. Discussion of Michigan Public Heath Code,
national trends, and important case law relevant to how Mental Health
Professionals conduct themselves in and out of the office; appropriate and
inappropriate ways to relate to clients.
Difficult to
Treat Clients, a seminar by
Mary Clark PhD, sponsored by the Michigan Association of Professional
Psychologists, 10/15/2004 on current techniques for treating eating disorders
and chronic depression.
Comprehensive
Substance Abuse Assessments,
a seminar by Lannie McRill MA, on 11/26/2003 in the Penobscot Building,
sponsored by the Michigan Bar Association, addressing the state of the art
regarding substance abuse assessments, including a new patch that will test
whether or not someone is using/abusing substances over a 30 day period, and
testing to determine toxic levels of legally prescribed substances to
accurately assess whether these substances are being abused.
Mediation
Seminar, a practicum hosted
by Hon. Bill Callahan 5/6/2003 consisting of pro bono mediation of clients who
desired this service and were not represented by counsel. Each participant performed a mediation and
the experiences of the mediators, consisting of trained attorneys and mental
health professionals, were later discussed in a group forum.
Domestic
Mediation Training,
presented at the Dispute Resolution Center of Central Michigan on March 5, 6,
13, 14, 15 of 2002. This seminar on facilitative
mediation was presented by Zena Zumeta J.D., president of the Mediation
Training and Consultation Institute and The Collaborative Workplace.
MIPA
luncheon presentation by Kay Schwartzberg J.D. and Lyle Danuloff PhD entitled, Parenting
Plans for Teens, 12/13/2001 in Birmingham at Andiamo Italia West
Restaurant.
2nd
Annual Rapid-Fire Topics in Family Law, Moderated by: Sandor M. Gelman,
November 29, 2001 from 9-4:30 PM at the Double Tree Hotel in Novi Michigan.
MIPA
luncheon presentation by Mary Whiteside PhD entitled Parenting Plans for
Young Children During Separation and Divorce, 10/18/2001 in Birmingham at
Andiamo Italia West Restaurant.
Sex
and Violence in Divorcing Families: Assessment and
intervention, by Kathryn Kuehnle, PhD, fall 2000, sponsored by Michigan
Inter-Professional Association.
Child
Custody Evaluations: A Seminar by James Bow PhD and WSU, October
1998.
e.g., Irreconcilable Conflicts Between
Therapeutic And Forensic Roles, Stuart A Greenberg and Daniel W. Shuman,
Professional Psychology: Research And Practice, 1997, vol. 28, no. 1, 50-57; Dual
Relationships In Psycholegal Evaluations: Treating Psychologists Serving As
Expert Witnesses, Grant L. Iverson, PhD, American Journal Of Forensic Psychology,
volume 18, issue 2, 2000 p.79-87)
THE MICHIGAN PENAL CODE (EXCERPT) Act 328 of
1931 750.520d Criminal sexual conduct in the third degree; felony. Sec. 520d.
(1) A person is guilty of criminal sexual conduct in the third degree if the
person engages in sexual penetration with another person and if any of the
following circumstances exist: (a) That other person is at least 13 years of
age and under 16 years of age.
“[d]evelopmental mastery on simple and
complex fluency tasks along with sustained attention and some inhibitory
abilities occurred between 12-15 years of age. Tasks that called for use of
problem-solving strategies appeared to tap more advanced levels of
neuropsychological development and complete mastery on these tasks occurred
between 16-19 years of age. This finding confirms the claim that behaviors
associated with the frontal lobe function follow a multi-stage process of
development.” A
neuropsychological assessment of behaviors purported to frontal lobe
functioning: a developmental perspective (ECDP Abstracts Overview). Karin Cecilia Brocki
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