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Forensic Psychologist

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You are a forensic psychologist with a private practice. As a trained psychologist, you apply your knowledge to the criminal justice system. You work with police, lawyers and prosecutors on a number of different types of cases.

For example, the police may ask you to create a psychological profile of an offender. This only happens after more serious crimes such as murder.

At other times, you are called upon to provide expert testimony on a defendant's mental state. This commonly happens when the judge has to decide whether the accused person is mentally fit to stand trial, or if someone is pleading that they were not guilty by reason of insanity. Before you can testify in court, you will need to interview the defendant and perform psychological tests.

However, the bulk of your time is spent on child custody cases. In these cases, your testimony helps the judge decide what type of custody arrangement would be best for the child.

One day, you open your mail to discover a check for $2,200. The check is from a lawyer for whom you have worked in the past. However, the check is not for payment for services you have already performed. Instead, the lawyer wants you to testify in an upcoming child custody case. His client is a mother suing to obtain sole legal and physical custody of her children.

You agree to meet with the lawyer and his client. At the meeting, you soon realize that the mother has no good reason for keeping the children away from their father. True, it was a bitter divorce, and the father can be uncooperative. But all the evidence points to his being a fine parent.

You believe that the best option for the children would be some sort of co-parenting arrangement. However, the mother intends to continue battling for sole custody for as long as her money holds out.

"When you deal with people in distress and attorneys who desperately want to 'win' their case, ethical issues constantly arise," says forensic psychologist Len Diamond. "In my work, ethical decisions have to be made daily."

The situation is clear. The lawyer will pay you $2,200 to testify in court that it is in the children's best interest to award sole custody to the mother.

If you refuse to do what he wants, he'll simply find another forensic psychologist with fewer scruples. On the other hand, if you go along with the charade, you're helping to separate the children from their father for no good reason.

What do you do?