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The Father Factor: The Official Blog of National Fatherhood Initiative

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Is the Sandy Hook Shooting Another Crime of Fatherlessness?

  
  
  

In the wake of the horrific tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut, our nation is collectively mourning and trying to figure out how something this terrible could happen. While it is not our job at NFI to figure out how to solve issues around gun control and mental health treatment, we would be remiss not to point out that once again, like in so many tragedies of this nature, there appears to be a significant “father factor” at play.

sandy hook

As we learn more and more about the troubled life of shooter Adam Lanza, it appears that the divorce of his parents had a significant, negative impact on his life.  

It is becoming clear that Adam Lanza suffered from some sort of emotional or psychological disorder that has not yet been specified. It also appears that this mental disorder contributed significantly to the heinous crime he committed. However, we know from research that children from father-absent homes are more likely to have emotional problems and are also more likely to commit crimes.According to this news article, he took the divorce especially hard – “The break up was traumatic, leaving the couple's sons devastated.” His father, Peter Lanza, had moved out and remarried in 2009; and although he had legal access to his child, he had not seen him in 6 months. In other words, there were no legal barriers preventing him from seeing his child, but he had not seen him since June. Adam Lanza was not alone in this – fully one third of children from father-absent homes never see their dads, and another third only see them once per month*. 

This blog has written several times about the father factor in mass murders (the Aurora shooting, the D.C. sniper, and Chardon High School, the Norway terrorist, and Tucson), and the patterns we see in each and every one of these cases is eerily similar. 

Had Peter Lanza been more involved in his son’s life -- helping him deal with the mental anguish it appears he was going through -- would things have turned out differently? Sadly, we will never know.

For now, all we can do is mourn with the families who were affected by this tragedy and start to work together to devise solutions that will reduce the likelihood of this sort of tragedy happening again. And certainly, part of the solution needs to be to ensure that all children have involved, responsible, and committed fathers in their lives who can help them navigate a difficult world, one that is especially difficult for the mentally ill.

*See: 

  • Stewart, Susan D. “Nonresident Parenting and Adolescent Adjustment: The Quality of Nonresident Father-Child Interaction.” Journal of Family Issues, 24 (March 2003): 217-244 
  • Aquilino, W.S. (2006). The noncustodial father-child relationship from adolescence into young adulthood. Journal of Marriage and Family, 68, 929-946

    photo credit: Rickydavid

Comments

Good point, pending the facts! To remedy that would interfere with a freedom that has become another cherished, postmodern right, the right to divorce. The father appears to be at fault here, but the cultural pressure is for mothers to take the marital home, and for the father to 'move on' in every sense and insert himself without researve in someone elase's family. Is it socially healthy?
Posted @ Tuesday, December 18, 2012 9:03 AM by Ben Knighton FRAI
Gentlemen, 
I agree with you - the family unit has been dismantled steadily but surely over the decades. While it is true that the majority of cases have swayed in the favor of the mother(which we believe to be most unintelligent and against the best interests of children), the family courts now seem to be making up for lost time by making court orders forcing children to be in the custody of a harmful parent, regardless of whether it is the Mom or Dad. It is clear that the legal system has a higher, darker agenda, and that is to strip us parents and our children of our legal rights. 
I am a mother who lost custody to my ex-spouse and I have had to content myself with court-ordered access and paying an exhorbitant of money in child support. I feel your pain because I live it, as a Mom, as a parent. 
Since we have all had enough of this bullshit, we are preparing a Federal Class Action in the US and in Canada against the Attorneys General and other relevant departments. If you would like to participate, please contact me in confidence at viewsofthechild@gmail.com
Posted @ Tuesday, December 18, 2012 10:23 PM by Lee Strong
Vero interesting I' ve poster it in Italy antonello
Posted @ Wednesday, December 19, 2012 2:28 PM by Antonello
It's funny how much press there is about gun control, but this is one of the very few articles about divorce as a factor. Why? Because divorcees are common in our society, divorcees see a deranged youth, and not his parents' divorce, as the DIRECT cause of this tragedy, and divorcees are personally offended when you state divorce as a factor. Sounds reasonable right? So replace "divorce" and "divorcees" with "gun ownership" and "gun owners" in what I've just said, and if it doesn't sound reasonable to you, then there is seriously something wrong with you. And remember, gun ownership is such an important right, it's guaranteed in the US Constitution, divorce is not. Should we outlaw divorce? Of course not; don't be silly! Should we outlaw guns? OF COURSE NOT; DON'T BE SILLY!
Posted @ Friday, January 11, 2013 5:55 AM by Tom O'Connor
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