






























 |
Decoy Inc.
Time: 8pm Saturday
Place: a bar in New
York City Mission:
to see how bad a
husband can be.
By:
Twenty-five-year-old
Teresa Russo is
tall, blonde and
beautiful. She's
also a decoy. If
a man has a
cheating heart
she will know -
and so will his
wife, thanks to
the tiny tape
recorder Teresa
wears strapped
to her calf. "I
run the wire
from the
recorder up the
leg of my
trousers and
under my
blouse," she
says, sipping
mineral water in
a Manhattan
restaurant.
"There's a tiny
microphone in my
bra that can
pick up
everything a man
says." Teresa
has been a decoy
for five years.
She works with a
team of former
New York City
detectives who
own
Check-A-Mate.
"Business is
booming," says
former NYPD
homicide
investigator
Gerry Palace,
the company's
president. "Men
in the Nineties
seem more
inclined to
cheat than ever,
plus in New York
you can never be
sure that a guy
you meet is
telling the
truth. That's
where we come
in."
Check-A-Mate
clients come to
Palace with
suspicions and
doubts. Teresa's
job is to give
them certainty
and peace of
mind. "The
typical job is a
wife who notices
a change in her
husband's
habits," says
Russo. "Maybe
he's suddenly
staying at work
later than
usual." That's
when Teresa sets
up the sting.
"I'll go to a
bar or
restaurant where
he's known to
hang out. I'll
go stand next to
him and get into
conversation."
The purpose
of this
exchange, with
tape rolling, is
to see how far
the husband or
boyfriend will
go, if given the
chance. The
clients often
give Teresa a
list of
questions to
ask, designed to
test their
fidelity. "I
tell them how
great they look,
what a nice
personality they
have," she says.
"Then I'll say
something like
'A guy like you
has to be
married, right?'
We call this the
integrity test.
Most married
guys under
suspicion say
'No, I'm
single.' That's
when I've got
them. I've done
more than 700
cases and only
three guys ever
told me the
truth. Most of
my married
targets I know
are going to
fail because the
first thing I
notice is they
ain't wearing
their wedding
rings."
Teresa was
Miss New York in
1991 and critics
of decoys say
she entraps her
targets with a
figure and a
sparkling smile
that make her
green eyes all
but
irresistible.
Middle-aged
accountants with
a paunch must
scramble to
stuff their
wedding rings in
their pockets
the moment she
walks in.
"That's not the
point," she
says. "They are
only a target
because they
have done
something
suspicious. If
they're married
they should
still be able to
resist
temptation, even
if I'm Cindy
Crawford with no
clothes on."
Gerry Palace
usually sends
out Teresa with
a back-up. He
will sit
somewhere else
in the venue,
keeping a close
eye on the decoy
and the mark.
Palace always
carries a gun
and sometimes
Teresa will
follow suit. "I
have a 9mm Glock
semi-automatic,
it's light and
fast," she says.
"Sometimes I
have to be in a
bad
neighbourhood or
targeting a mark
with a history
of violence.
Then I'll carry
a weapon and you
can bet I know
how to use it."
It's eight
o'clock on a
Saturday night.
The venue is
Match Uptown, a
slick restaurant
within catwalk
distance of
Calvin Klein's
headquarters.
Models line the
walls with faces
familiar from
building-sized
billboards in
Times Square.
One face is
strikingly
familiar and
he's Teresa's
mark.
"I'm really
nervous about
this job, " she
says in the cab
on the way. "The
guy is engaged
to a supermodel,
she's really
gorgeous. I
can't compete
with that." She
fiddles with her
long blonde hair
and adjusts the
Velcro that
holds her tape
recorder in
place. "Gerry
hand-picked me
for this but I
don't know."
She's dressed
for the part.
All Calvin Klein
elegance.
Graceful slacks
end in a pair of
fake-crocodile
boots. An
Armani-style
jacket swings
open to reveal a
curvaceous chest
and an athlete's
stomach all
sculpted inside
a tight bodysuit
from Donna
Karan. "Only
three guys have
ever turned me
down and one was
a religious
fanatic. Tonight
could be number
four."
She needn't
have worried.
While Palace
watched from the
bar Teresa went
to work. Earlier
she had booked a
table for two
but sat there
alone. She kept
giving the mark
a look with her
flashing eyes
and soon he was
at her side. The
tape tells the
tale. The
underwear model
asks Teresa why
she's alone. She
fakes a story
about a
girlfriend stuck
in Denver
airport. He sits
down, orders
drinks. Then she
works the hit.
Teresa: "Where's
your girlfriend
tonight? Or are
you married?"
Guy: "Hah! I
ain't married,
not yet at
least. I have
few girlfriends
but nothing
special."
Nothing
except a
supermodel
fiancee with a
big diamond ring
who broke down
crying when she
heard the tape,
her suspicions
confirmed. Her
man is a
runaround. "She
was unhappy,"
says Palace.
"But at least
she knew the
truth before she
got married.
That cost her
some sleepless
nights and our
$500 fee but it
would have been
more expensive
to marry the
loser."
There is
nothing illegal
about what
Teresa does,
astonishing
given the
litigious nature
of American
society. Her
recordings have
been used as
court evidence
and nobody has
challenged their
validity. Gerry
Palace has a
portfolio of 20
women decoys. He
shows their
photographs to
his clients and
tells the wife
to choose the
face her husband
is most likely
to find
attractive.
Teresa gets
picked more than
anybody else.
"I'm working all
the time," she
says,
acknowledging
that these days
she also carries
her gun more
often than not.
"Some guys have
been leaving
messages at
Gerry's,
threatening my
life. That is
scary. They're
anonymous calls
but Gerry's
tracking them."
A prime
suspect is a
Frenchman called
Charles who was
pulled down by
Teresa in August
and lost half a
million dollars
in the bargain.
"He came here
from France with
a sob story. He
met our client
and played
hard-to- get.
For weeks this
went on. He is
very handsome
and charming but
reserved. When
he explained
that he was
recovering from
the loss of his
wife and two
children 18
months ago our
client was
hooked."
The couple
got engaged. She
was wealthy with
an independent
fortune. Charles
wanted to open a
business selling
high-quality
designer leather
coats. She
helped him get
started. Each
night he'd bring
home flowers and
make love with
her until the
early hours.
"There were none
of the usual
signs," says
Palace. "He was
loving, he was
full of desire
for her and his
habits were
regular."
Perfect? Too
perfect for the
client.
Before she
injected another
half million
into Charles's
business and
walked down the
aisle with him
she wanted to
know if he was
really so good.
"I went to his
showroom," says
Teresa. "I told
him I modelled.
He said he'd
love me to do a
fashion show
with him. He
said I was
beautiful, the
compliments just
poured out of
him. He asked me
to lunch. I
asked if he was
involved. He
said no and told
me he hadn't
been out with a
woman in two
years, not since
his wife died.
He kind of
teared up when
he told me."
With the
incriminating
tape in hand,
Teresa went
about the other
part of her job
- taking the
tape to the
client, sitting
by while they
listen and then
offering help
once they've
heard the awful
truth. "This was
hard. The poor
girl started
crying. He said
to me exactly
what he'd said
to her. She
heard him say
how he had this
rich aunt who
gave him money,
that the
business was
just a game. It
turned out he'd
been screwing
girls in hotel
rooms on his
fiancee's money
almost every
afternoon of the
week."
One of
Teresa's clients
heard her
husband say he
was a widower,
another heard
her fiance make
arrangements to
meet Teresa in a
Las Vegas hotel
room. When he
turned up he
found his wife
waiting for him,
tape recording
in hand. "These
women are
worried that
they are being
betrayed," says
Teresa. "Often
their marriage
is the most
important thing
in their lives
and so long as
they are
suspicious they
can't retain
their
self-esteem."
That explains
the questions
that most women
want asked. "The
wife wants to
know if he's
going to deny
her, if he's
going to deny
their children,
if he's going to
ask for my
telephone
number."
Teresa is
somewhat of an
avenging angel.
A tall willowy
nightmare for
any cheatster,
driven by her
own pain. "I
first met Gerry
because I
thought my
fiance was
betraying my
trust," she
says. "I needed
to know the
truth. When I
found out he
was, it
destroyed me."
Gerry helped her
pick up the
pieces, offering
her a job. "I've
been cynical
about men ever
since and this
job doesn't make
it any easier.
I'm not out to
hurt any man,
I'm out to help
the women and
give them some
peace of mind.
For some reason,
men don't think
they will get
caught. They are
so wrong."
Teresa comes
from a large
Italian family.
When her father
heard what she
was doing he
flipped. "He
said, 'How can
you do this to
men?' I told
him, 'But Dad
you wouldn't do
that. If you did
I'd catch you!'
My mother thinks
it's a wonderful
thing, that I'm
helping women,"
she laughed,
flashing at me
the eyes that
have undone
hundreds of men.
"I already go in
knowing these
guys are lying
and that's not
something they
have to do."
Breaking
men's secrets
can be risky and
Teresa's gun
shows she knows
the danger. "The
most scared I
got was with a
guy known to be
violent," she
says. "We were
in a private
club. The mark
was real
suspicious of me
at first but in
the end he
relaxed. I got
what I needed
but as we were
leaving my tape
recorder fell
off my leg."
Teresa shivers a
little as she
recalls the
moment. "I
thought I was
done, this guy
owned the club
and had some
nasty-looking
goons behind the
bar. My back-ups
were outside.
Luckily I was
wearing new Jil
Sander boots
with a wide cuff
and the recorder
just dropped
down inside."
In the last
year Gerry
Palace has flown
Teresa to London
twice to do
jobs. She
trapped two
prominent
businessman, one
at Claridge's,
one at
Annabel's. The
trips were so
successful that
Palace plans to
open a London
office. "In New
York, men know
about decoys
now," says
Teresa. "I think
we are having a
deterrent
effect. We can
do the same
thing in
London." So
watch out, you
two-timing
Englishmen.
Teresa is coming
and she takes no
prisoners.
Feb 14th 2006
In game of love, cheaters never win
Rick Gershman,
St. Petersburg Times Online Tampa Bay
It’s a fine time to show your
significant other you care, but if
your amorous antics are aimed
elsewhere, beware.
On Valentine’s Day, the
businessman was determined to be
with the woman he loved.
That woman, unfortunately, was
not his wife.
The lovebirds nestled in a corner
booth at an Italian restaurant in
Dunedin, showing little discretion.
Lips locked on lips, on wrists,
on ears, shoulders, necks. Hands
disappeared into clothing.
They could be seen by diners at
only two tables.
At one sat private investigator
Kevin Collins, hired by the
businessman’s wife. At the other,
coincidentally, sat the imperceptive
adulterer’s boss.
"(He) asked his boss to recommend
a place to take his wife," Collins
recalled. "But he takes his
girlfriend. He doesn’t think his
boss might go there with his (own)
wife on Valentine’s Day?"
Exposing Valentine’s Day
dalliances was not uncommon for
Collins, of Clearwater, and legions
of detectives like him. Cheaters run
amok on Feb. 14, and private
investigators run around trying to
catch them in the act. Today is one
of the industry’s busiest days.
That’s particularly true in
Florida, St. Petersburg investigator
Rick Aspen said, partly thanks to
Florida’s no-fault divorce law:
"Couples can get a divorce at any
time for any reason."
Why is Valentine’s Day the Super
Bowl of surveillance? Sandra Hope of
Mate Check said the adulterer feels the
need to spend time with both of his
- or her - significant others on
that day.
Or, at least, close to it.
Weekends that surround the holiday
also are filled with infidelity,
said Dank, whose agency runs the Web
site
www.matecheckpi.com
Subtle title.
"Yeah, I know, but if you think
your spouse is cheating on you, you
need to be able to find our
services," said Dank, who works in
the Detroit area.
Business is good because
infidelity in general has been on
the rise, says Dank, who credits a
continual increase in male-female
office relationships.
He says time management is key to
romancing more than one lover on a
holiday, and that’s why some
cheaters meet their obligation in
abbreviated fashion.
"That’s a Valentine classic - 15
minutes in the back of a parking
lot," said investigator Collins.
"Just to show her you care."
And that’s why, all kidding
aside, detectives such as Dank
consider the job a public service.
People need to appreciate "the
grief and pain and distress having
your spouse cheating on you causes,"
he said.
"Those people are in real pain.
There’s no way, shape or form people
could argue that what we’re doing is
not of value to our clients."
But it’s no fun for the cheaters,
such as the businessman whose corner
booth left him cornered. The outcome
was ugly.
Doubly busted, the cheater ended
up dejected, divorced and - Collins
heard through the grapevine -
demoted.
"I hear his manager didn’t cotton
to chasin’ tail," the detective
said. "Thought it lacked moral fiber
and all."
--Times staff writers
Adultery conviction, is an affair to
remember for divorce industry
By John F. Kelly,
Washington Post
When John Raymond Bushey Jr. became
the first person in as long as
anyone can remember to have been
convicted of adultery in Virginia,
several things happened. He resigned
his position as attorney for the
Shenandoah Valley town of Luray,
Va., a job he had for 32 years.
People who heard of his situation
scratched their heads and said,
“You mean,
adultery is actually a crime?”
And those who wade into the messy
aftermath of alleged infidelity,
such as divorce lawyers and private
investigators, started pondering the
impact the ruling would have on
their jobs.
As for the folks in Luray,
they’re just curious what the
snowy-haired Bushey -- 65 years old,
married for 18 years to the town
clerk, and the very model of a
courtly Southern lawyer -- had been
up to.
“You always
hear gossip, but you never know what
to put any credence to,” said
a woman who works on Luray’s Main
Street. Like virtually everyone else
interviewed in the town of 4,500,
she spoke on the condition that her
name not be used when commenting on
the Bushey case.
Because the charges were filed in
Virginia’s lowest court, there are
no records that say exactly what
Bushey did, with whom he did it, or
why prosecutors would pluck such a
rarely used statute from Virginia’s
criminal code and apply it to him.
Bushey has declined to discuss
the case. And prosecutors have not
given many details of Bushey’s
guilty plea on Oct. 23, the result
of an agreement.
“There’s
nobody peeping in a window saying,
Mr. Bushey did this,’ ” said
an assistant district attorney,
Glenn Williamson, when asked how
authorities had found out about the
indiscretion. The complainant, he
said, was the woman involved with
Bushey. She has not been charged.
Although he pleaded guilty in
District Court, Bushey is allowed to
appeal to Circuit Court. On Oct. 31,
that’s what he did.
More details might come out when
the case goes before a judge on Jan.
27. Until then, Williamson is not
discussing the case, beyond saying,
“I think that
the state has an interest in
protecting the sanctity of
marriage.”
Like other Class 4 misdemeanors
in Virginia, adultery carries a
maximum penalty of a $250 fine.
Bushey paid half that, along with
$36 in court costs.
Prosecutors in the Washington
area could not recall the last time
anyone around here was charged with
adultery. Many laws seen as
holdovers from an earlier morality
have been repealed in periodic
overhauls of state statutes. The US
Supreme Court’s ruling in June that
struck down Texas’s antisodomy
statute has prompted many states,
including Virginia, to scrutinize
laws concerning private acts between
consenting adults.
The Virginia State Crime
Commission has spent the past three
years studying the state’s criminal
code and next month will recommend
repealing its sodomy statute and the
fornication statute, which prohibits
sex between unmarried people.
Also recommended for repeal:
“Conspiring to
cause a spouse to commit adultery,”
a leftover from the days of fault
divorce, when a wife sometimes hired
a woman to seduce her husband and
also paid a camera-toting private
investigator to kick down the door
of their love nest.
But the adultery statue has held
on, even though the commission staff
said the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Lawrence v. Texas could be
interpreted to suggest that
Virginia’s adultery statute is
unconstitutional.
“There’s still a
public policy concern,” said
Brian J. Moran, a Virginia General
Assembly delegate who serves on the
crime commission.
“Adultery is
wrong, and we were not going to
eliminate a criminal action even
though it has been infrequently
prosecuted.”
There is another reason it is
useful to keep on the books a law
that is seldom prosecuted, experts
said: It allows individuals in civil
divorce cases to assert their Fifth
Amendment right against
self-incrimination when asked about
extramarital exploits. If adultery
were not a crime, spouses involved
in divorces would have no legal
protection when presented with such
questions as,
“What were your secretary’s
pantyhose doing in your glove
compartment?”
With adultery a crime that
conceivably could be prosecuted,
“a lot of this
kind of dime-store novel testimony
just doesn’t get presented,”
said Joseph F. Murphy Jr., chief
judge of Maryland’s Court of Special
Appeals.
But some judges in civil cases do
compel bickering spouses to testify,
arguing that the crime of adultery
is never prosecuted. The Bushey
conviction has ensured that this is
no longer the case.
“That’s going
to have an impact on future cases
because I think while in the past
the argument was that nobody ever’s
been convicted [of adultery] so it’s
not really a risk, this is saying
something differently,” said
Carol Schrier-Polak, a family law
lawyer with the Arlington firm Bean,
Kinney & Korman.
Sanford K. Ain, a lawyer at
Sherman, Meehan, Curtin & Ain
agreed: “The
decision may have some very
significant consequences,” he
said.
The divorce industry has changed
over the years, as the role adultery
plays in court cases has evolved.
The rise of no-fault divorce meant
that establishing adultery was no
longer as important as it once was.
But in Virginia it still is a factor
when a judge divides assets, sets
alimony, and makes custody
decisions.
Private investigators in Virginia
pore over court rulings such as Coe
v. Coe and Watts v. Watts, cases
that established what constitutes
“clear and
convincing” proof of
adultery. Public displays of
affection caught on videotape are a
start, said Caren Chancey of
Background Brokers in Bristow.
Courts also look favorably on such
evidence as a videotape of an
adulterous couple entering a motel
room in the middle of the day and
spending at least two hours inside
alone. If a private investigator can
document the sex act -- in a vehicle
or through open vertical blinds --
so much the better.
Chancey said most tapes are never
shown to a judge. Their existence
often is enough to force the
cheating spouse to a settlement.
Deborah Aylward of A Woman-Owned
Private Investigation Agency in
Falls Church, Va., predicts that
publicity surrounding the Bushey
case will make the unfaithful toe
the line -- for a while.
“We’re going
to see a dip in our sales as people
are more cautious,” Aylward
said.
“Absolutely. People are going to be
very, very good. But I’ve got to
tell you, this industry is
cyclical.”
And that means the Seventh
Commandment will continue to be
broken. Bushey declined comment. In
a phone interview, his wife, Cindy
Bushey, did not comment on her
husband’s problems beyond saying,
“We’re going to
stay together.”
© Copyright 2003
Globe Newspaper Company.
Bedroom Eyes
Allen T. Cheng,
AsiaWeek.com
WEI WUJUN, 48, is China’s best-known
private investigator, famous for
tracing philandering husbands and
their mistresses. The former PLA
officer spoke to ALLEN T. CHENG
about men, women, money and Mao
-
Is there a
“mistress boom” in China? Is
that why you’re so busy?
You can’t stop a
married man from playing around,
but when he takes a mistress and
actually sets up a household,
then he breaks the law. Er nais
[second wives] hurt the
institution of marriage, and too
many married men in China these
days are taking them on.
-
It’s a growing
problem? Why?
It’s not because
Chinese wives aren’t satisfying
their husbands’ needs. China’s
spiritual vacuum is the problem.
Before economic reform began,
everyone was poor and relied on
the richness of Maoist ideology.
Deng Xiaoping overturned Maoism
with economic reforms, but he
lacked an ideology. What has
come to fill the vacuum has been
the worship of materialism -
people in power and those with
money are never satisfied. They
need more power, more money, and
with it more sex to satisfy
their unquenchable desires. All
of a sudden, some men find
themselves rich and feel they
must be surrounded by beautiful
women otherwise they’re missing
something. It’s a prestige
thing. Go into any large Chinese
company, private or state-owned,
and look at the top executives.
Almost all of them have several
beautiful women at their
beckoning. This is very
unhealthy and quite often it
hurts the wives.
-
Who comes to you
for help?
Most of the time
it’s women in their 40s, wives
of executives of major companies
- private and state-owned - and
sometimes the wives of senior
provincial officials. They
complain they never see their
husbands, that they never come
home and they suspect that
they’re living with someone
else.
-
So what do you do?
I charge a basic
up-front fee, quite low
actually, around $500. They pay,
I initiate my investigation. I’m
usually able to gather
sufficient evidence on their
husbands within a month or two.
-
What kind of
evidence?
Mostly photos. I
spend a lot of time following
people around until late at
night. I take pictures, rummage
through garbage, talk to
neighbors and do whatever is
legal to prove my clients’
accusations. It’s up to them if
they want to take their husbands
to court. But the evidence gives
them power to seek substantial
financial rewards from their
spouses.
-
Are there clients
you don’t accept?
Yes, there are -
wives of central government
leaders. Every once in a while I
get a call from a wife of a
senior Beijing politician. I
usually don’t accept their
requests. It’s just too
dangerous to take these sort of
jobs. I have good contacts in
Public Security and the PLA, but
even they can’t protect me from
the wrath of a senior official
if I catch him red-handed.
-
You ever plan to
retire?
I’m still full of
energy and don’t plan on
retiring for a long time to
come. Chinese wives need me.
This article can be found on the
website of
AsiaWeek.com
Relationship red flags
Helena Oliviero
Staff Writer,
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Goldie Margolis, a 35-year-old
executive at a Fortune 500 company,
had suspicions about a man she was
dating. But lonely and craving
romance, she ignored flagrant
relationship warning signs that
should have told her she was on
shaky ground.
He didn’t give her
his home phone number. He never
invited her to his place. They
shared candlelight meals only on
weeknights. Giddiness blinded
Margolis. He sent her pages saying,
“I am your
biggest fan.” He would pull
her close and say,
“You are the
’it’ girl.”
“You see what
you want to see when emotions are
involved,” said Margolis, who
lives in Atlanta. But after a
three-month courtship, she was
“hit smack in
the face” with what she
sometimes feared: After someone
called her home and hung up, she
punched *69, returned the call and
heard another woman’s voice on the
answering machine -- a voice that
mentioned the name of her boyfriend.
“I ditched
the rules and gave in,”
Margolis said.
“In fact, I fell in.”
It’s common for men and women
desperate for romance to ignore
relationship red flags, just as
Margolis did. One of the more
prominent examples occurred last
week in Gwinnett County when Anthony
Glenn Owens was arrested on bigamy
charges. He’s suspected of marrying
nine women, including one in Duluth.
He duped some of them by posing as a
minister.
One woman, 37-year-old Mattie
Noland of Tuscaloosa, Ala., admitted
it seemed odd that her husband would
spend up to a week away from home,
ostensibly producing a gospel album.
Why doubt him, the Pizza Hut
employee thought, since he was a
preacher?
“I trusted
him blindly,” Noland said in
a telephone interview.
“A lot of times,
we don’t want to see it. We are
blinded to the point of being in
love.”
They started dating in October
1998 and got married in June 1999.
They separated one year later, after
Noland caught Owens going out with
another woman. She said she would
get a divorce but doesn’t have the
money for one.
“I wish I
could have seen it, but I didn’t see
it until it was too late,”
Noland said.
There are common red flags anyone
in a committed relationship should
take note. Among them:
-
The other person gets
defensive when you ask for life
details.
-
Finding slips of paper with
unfamiliar names on them.
-
Getting phone hang-ups at
home.
Above all, don’t rush things,
relationship experts advise.
“Many women
want to connect intimately in a
relationship so much, they are more
than willing to deny or overlook
what their acute senses would
normally pick up,” said
Helene Brenner, a Maryland
psychologist and author of the book
“I Know I’m in
There Somewhere: A Woman’s Guide to
Finding Her Inner Voice and Living a
Life of Authenticity.”
“Sad to say,
I’ve seen this so many times,”
Brenner said.
“It is a tremendous vulnerability in
a great many women.”
While men are just as susceptible
to ignoring signs that a
relationship is built on a series of
lies, none contacted for this
article consented to have their
names used. One expert estimated
women are three times more likely to
be fooled by men who are in other
relationships.
Private investigator Mark Allen
stakes out hotels for clients who
suspect adultery, and he says he
often spots signs of an affair
during the first phone conversation
with the person who hires him.
“Hang-ups at
home, new wardrobe, little slips of
paper with names on them and lack of
bedroom activity. Those are all red
flags to me,” he said.
“I hear those
over and over.”
To someone outside looking in,
the wrongdoing often appears
obvious.
Two-timing seems apparent to
listeners of the
“Bert Show” on Q100 (WWWQ-FM)
long before the boyfriend or spouse
under suspicion becomes part of a
skit known as
“War of the Roses.” In the
segment, a woman calls the radio
station and talks about why she
suspects her man is cheating,
mentioning everything from long
nights at the gym to lack of sex.
The man, who is offered a dozen of
red roses for free to give to anyone
he chooses, almost always sends them
to a mistress.
“The women
know deep down that the guy is
cheating,” said
“Bert Show”
producer Jeff Dauler.
“And they need
proof not so they can catch them as
much as having proof for themselves
to verify what they already know.”
Dr. D Charles Williams, a
Dunwoody psychologist, said
dishonesty is more acute today in
dating, jobs and school. The news is
filled with corporate fraud and
other indiscretions: Dennis
Kozlowski, the former chairman of
Tyco International, is accused of
looting his company and investors of
$600 million; Cubs outfielder Sammy
Sosa is caught with cork in his bat;
Los Angeles Lakers player Kobe
Bryant admits to cheating on his
wife.
Success and conquest, Williams
says, are valued over honesty.
“In every
area of our life, there is less
integrity,” Williams said.
“I have men come
in here who have consistently
cheated and then they say they have
trust issues with the person they
are with, and it’s like, you have
consistently lied and you don’t
trust her?”
Atlanta psychologist Robert
Simmermon said stories about people
with many lovers or con artists are
nothing new.
“These go
back to ancient Greece,” said
Simmermon.
“There [have] just been various ways
they are carried out. . . . What
does this tell us about ourselves?
That we are human and we can’t
transform our humanness.”
But Anita Connor of Atlanta, who
is her late 30s, said she has
learned to do her homework. Fifteen
years ago she dated a man who she
later learned was married.
“It’s always
the schemers who hate it when you
try to check up on them and they
give you a guilt trip, saying, ’Oh,
don’t you trust me?’ A real man
knows there’s nothing wrong with a
woman being careful. You almost have
to treat it like the person is an
employee and you are the employer.
You’ve got to do your investigative
work.”
GETTING A CLUE
Here are some behaviors that may
indicate your beloved is beguiling
you:
-
Evasiveness about job,
family and background.
-
Sudden schedule changes.
-
Sudden appearance changes.
-
Insistence on meeting at odd
times.
-
Often unreachable.
-
Friends are luke warm about
him/her.
-- Source:
Relationship experts
On-line surveillance among spouses
on rise
Damian Dovarganes,
Associated Press
Suspicious husbands and wives who
once might have hired a private eye
to find out if their spouses were
cheating are now using
do-it-yourself technology to check
on an increasingly popular hideaway
for trysts - the Internet.
Divorce
lawyers and marriage counselors say
Internet-abetted infidelity, romance
originating in chat rooms and
fuelled by e-mails, is now one of
the leading factors in marital
breakdowns.
With the surge in cyberaffairs, a
new market for electronic spying has
developed. Web sites such as
matecheckpi.com describe an
array of surveillance products
capable of tracking a cheating
spouse’s e-mails and on-line chats,
including some that can monitor each
key stroke in real time.
“The
traditional detective hired to chase
information is being replaced by
software that’s not terribly
expensive but can give you 100 times
the information,” said John
Mayoue, a prominent divorce lawyer
from Atlanta.
“It used to
be that when you wanted to prove
adultery, you would prove it
circumstantially,” he said.
“In the computer
era, I can have something that is so
graphic, so clear, there’s not a
whole lot of room for argument.”
John LaSage, a Southern
Californian, established the
Chatcheaters Web site after his wife
of 23 years left him and their two
teenage daughters without
forewarning in 1999 to join a New
Zealand man she had met on-line.
Mate Check - which offers
advice, surveillance equipment and
first-person stories of betrayal -
averages 400 visitors a day, mostly
women, Mr. LaSage said. His wares
include $450 (U.S.) vehicle trackers
and $100 computer-spying programs.
Mr. LaSage said he was devastated
to discover, after his wife had
left, that she had engaged in erotic
e-mail and chat room correspondence
with several men.
“I tell
people to be careful - you have to
be prepared for what you’re going to
see,” he said.
Sandra Morris, a San Diego
attorney who is president of the
American Academy of Matrimonial
Lawyers, said the spread of Internet
infidelity has raised some
complicated issues about computer
privacy.
“A spouse may
have a misplaced sense of
entitlement to spy,” she
said. “There are
prohibitions against electronic
eavesdropping, though a lot of
people feel that when someone’s
cheating, all bets are off.”
Mr. Mayoue said federal statutes
outlawing interception of electronic
communications can apply within a
marriage.
“A spouse
does have a right to privacy even
from his or her own spouse,” he
said. “I’ve been on both sides of
this - it’s the most compelling
evidence you’ll have in a divorce
case, but also the most fraught with
potential liability.”
A suspicious husband or wife may
have no legal grounds for breaking
into codeword-protected areas of a
spouse’s personal computer, but may
be able to justify reading an e-mail
that was easily retrieved on a
shared family computer, Mr. Mayoue
said.
David Greenfield, a West
Hartford, Conn., psychologist and
author of the book, Virtual
Addiction, said many spouses who
engage in cyber affairs consider
their on-line romances to be
harmless.
“But the spouses of those who are
cheating don’t see it that way,” Mr.
Greenfield said. “It’s often done on
the same computer they both use at
home. It’s like having someone else
in your own bedroom.”
He said the convenience and
seeming anonymity of the Internet
have attracted a new breed of
adulterers, people who might have
been too timid to make their first
forays into infidelity face-to-face.
“Affairs have always existed,”
Mr. Greenfield said. “But the fact
that you can connect with people all
over the world with relative ease
and no cost lowers that threshold.”
A University of Florida
researcher, Beatriz Mileham, studied
Internet infidelity as part of her
doctoral dissertation, interviewing
76 men and 10 women who used popular
chat rooms called “Married and
Flirting” and “Married But
Flirting.”
Most of the participants insisted
they loved their spouses but sought
a romantic encounter on-line because
of boredom or their partner’s
disinterest in sex, Ms. Mileham
found. She said 24 of the
participants ended up having a
real-life affair with at least one
of the people they met on-line.
Sandra Hope demonstrates how to
set a surveillance vehicle tracker
underneath his truck’s bumper.
Sandra Hope, a Native Arizonan,
established the matecheckpi.com Web
site, offering advice, surveillance
equipment and first-person stories
of betrayal. The vehicle tracker
keeps a computer-readable log with
exact time and locations, with the
help of a satellite GPS receiver. MATE CHECK PRIVATE INVESTIGATIONS
IS NATIONWIDE
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