EFTA00156673
EFTA00156680 DataSet-9
EFTA00156682

EFTA00156680.pdf

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April 21, 2021 Call with Dr. Lisa Rocchio • Dr. Rocchio's training is over the course of her career, not just in graduate school. The topics included traumatic stress (the effects of trauma), and clinical as well as forensic psychology. • Dr. Rocchio has written about, presented, and conducted numerous trainings on the assessment and treatment of trauma. • Dr. Rocchio also trains psychiatric residents at Brown in treating trauma survivors. • Dr. Rocchio's testimony is based on her education as well as her training, experience, and research. • Saying that victims are "susceptible" puts the onus on victims. It is more accurate to say that individuals or victims are "targeted." • Sexual abuse of minors frequently occurs through the use of manipulation or coercion in the context of an established relationship that is developed over time rather than through the use of forcible rape. • It's not fair to say that the presence of women can "especially" facilitate the sexual abuse of minors. Abusers might use all sorts of other people. • Victims are often subject to a strategic pattern of behaviors that can take a variety of forms and function to obscure the nature of the abuse and to build trust and attachment with their abuser. That relationship of trust and attachment, in turn, can prevent victims from being aware that what they are experiencing is abuse and can prevent disclosure. Minor victims may therefore not identify what's happening as abusive at the time or during the course of the abuse and may not recognize the consequences of that abuse until adulthood. • Most sexual assaults go unreported and disclosures are often made long after the incident. Nondisclosure, incremental disclosure, and secrecy are common among victims of sexual abuse for a variety of reasons, which can include fear, shame, humiliation, fear of not being believed, and fear of retaliation. • Re memory: memory for and disclosure of traumatic/abusive events is impacted by a number of factors. Dr. Rocchio can testify about the research regarding the various factors that go into how people can remember abuse—what's encoded to begin with, which pieces are remembered. That can include the circumstances surrounding the trauma, but also other things. The remembering process can be a piece, but just one piece. • Repeated exploitation/abuse can increase the likelihood of victimization later in life and has been shown to result in long-term traumatic and psychological consequences, including the ways in which the victim interacts with the legal system. • Numerous scientific studies show the significant psychological harm that can result from childhood sexual victimization. • Complex trauma is significant for repeated episodes of repeated childhood sexual abuse. It's associated with more harmful outcomes than PTSD. o Complex trauma = trauma that involves repetitive or prolonged exposure to or experiences of multiple traumatic stressors, involves harm or abandonment by 3502-005 Page I of 2 EFTA_00001339 EFTA00156680 caregivers or other trusted adults, and occurs at developmentally vulnerable times in a person's life, especially during childhood. o When childhood sexual abuse occurs under those conditions, it can be considered complex trauma o The prolonged nature of complex trauma and the resulting disruption to an individual's psychological development can result in profound dysregulation in emotional control, problems with attention/concentration, distorted perceptions of self/the perpetrator/others, severe traumatic/medical problems, and difficulties with identity/relationships/suicidality/behavioral control. ■ Distorted perceptions of the perpetrator: may view the perpetrator as someone who has been particularly loving, all powerful or all malevolent, someone who intended to do good, etc. Different ways, but it impacts how the victim view that person. • Dr. Rocchio's testimony relies on her education and training on psychological trauma, traumatic stress, interpersonal violence, and childhood sexual abuse. (That includes her knowledge of the literature.) She has also provided education and training, not just received it. • Dr. Rocchio also has a forensic practice conducting forensic psychological evaluations of people who have experienced sexual abuse and trauma. • Dr. Rocchio is also a member of the APA Ethics Committee. • Dr. Rocchio's practice involves supervising 7 other employees 3502-005 Page 2 of 2 EFTA_00001340 EFTA00156681
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EFTA00156680
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