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NCFM Advisers John Davis, Esq. and Eric L Nelson, PhD — False Accusation, Proxy Violence and Men Committing Suicide, The Chris Christensen Tragedy

December 20, 2022
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Chris Christensen suicide

Christensen and his wife Marlena from his final Facebook post. Facebook / Chris Christensen

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Several weeks ago, a 51 year old man who was a model husband, Father and educator jumped to his death at Disneyland in California.

It appears his wife had falsely accused him of domestic violence.  He was arrested, given an arrest record, thrown out of his home and isolated from his family based solely on the false accusation of his abusive wife.  We know the accusation was false not only because he denied it, but because his children have advanced evidence of his wife’s abuse, and his innocence.

According to one of Chris’s adult daughters from his first marriage, Chris’ abusive wife had been trying to isolate him from his children prior to falsely accusing him.  False accusations of domestic violence are common with abusive wives and using them to invoke the violence of the law is known as a form of “proxy violence” that abusive wives frequently employ, like many predators, including female preditors.  The panic, hysteria and false stereotypes about men being violent in our culture make it easy for abusive wives to falsely accuse their husbands and ruin the lives, careers and reputations with nothing more than a phone call to the police.

Unfortunately, our hysteria over men committing domestic violence serves to destroy men who are the actual victims of domestic violence.  The graph below shows the estimated number of deaths, per year, from domestic violence.  Implicit in the graph is that when men are abused, rather than fighting back, men commit suicide.

Suicide deaths

Men and boys are very vulnerable to suicide because of genetic facts, and, because our culture has become saturated with false stereotypes about men and saturated with cultural and social violence against men in all of our institutions.  Below is a graph which shows that the suicide rate for men, and boys,  is as much as six times the rate that it is for women and girls because of feminism’s hatred of men that is so prevalent in our institutions.

Feminism’s hatred of men and its widespread creation of false stereotypes about men has created a culture in which men are living in constant stress simply because they are men.  Men are not weak when they succumb to this stress.  Men are simply human and can only survive a modest level of stress for a modest period of time.

If men like Chris Christensen are subjected to severe stress, for a long time, such as losing their job, being incarcerated from a false accusation, losing their home from a false restraining order and being isolated from their children, men are likely to develop chronic, treatment resistance depression that leads to suicide.  That is a normal human reaction.

Suicide deaths

Suicide by gender

Chris, a school principal, was widely loved and admired.  A few days before committing suicide at Disneyland, Chris told Brittany he was trying to leave his abusive wife,  Marlena.  You can see Chris’ suicide note and an abusive text reportedly sent by Marlena here: https://gettr.com/user/Dr_nelson.

Unfortunately, prosecutors don’t charge women who make false accusations.  Feminists, who are deeply placed in the legal and judicial system, obstruct any efforts by police and prosecutors to do so.  As one attorney disclosed, “Are you nuts?  That would be professional suicide for a judge.  Look at what happened to Aaron Persky.”  Thus, if Marlena is investigated for false accusations, the safe bet is she won’t be charged.

Perhaps times will change.  People are rejecting the feminist mandate, “Always believe the women.”  Dozens of examples of proven false accusations that destroyed the lives and occupations of men are seen in Nelson’s “The Judicial War on Men” (https://www.aeqpub.com).  A somewhat parallel example is Michelle Carter, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter by egging on her boyfriend to commit suicide–and then he did.  If a thorough investigation shows Marlena Christiansen abused her husband Chris until he committed suicide, shouldn’t Marlena be charged with involuntary manslaughter also?  Would a man be charged if the sex of the involved parties was reversed?

You can contact the Anaheim Police Department Chief Jorge Cisneros at (714) 765-1986, and Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer at (714) 834-3600 to request a thorough investigation of the possibility that Marlena Christiansen falsely accused Chris of child endangerment, and this prompted him to commit suicide.  They should also investigate for possible domestic violence as well.

– – o0o – –

John Davis, J.D., LLM (1953 – ) was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He was educated at Case Western Reserve University (BA) (one of the top ten universities in the United States), Seattle University School of Law (JD), and, New York University School of Law (LL.M post-doctoral) (one of the top ten law schools in the United States). John is fluent in seven languages (including ancient Latin and Greek). He has travelled the world over, many times, and has represented clients, in his thirty five year career, such as the United States Government and the Federation of Russia. He has been a prosecutor four times in his 40 year career.  He has held positions such as Assistant Attorney General, Supreme Court Law Clerk, United States Speaker, and Deputy District Attorney. John is the author of “False Accusations of Rape: Lynching in the 21st Century” and “How to Avoid False Accusations of Rape.”  Purchase John’s books at www.amazon.com.

Eric L. Nelson, Ph.D., is an empirical criminologist specializing in police best practices for the investigation of domestic violence cases.  As a police officer Eric specialized in the investigation of domestic violence, sexual assault, and child abuse cases.  The FBI published Eric’s six step best practice method for the police investigation of domestic violence crime as a best practice.  It triples rates of prosecution and doubles rates of conviction.[i]  He is also a veteran of the Marine Corps, having served in counterintelligence and achieving the rank of Gunnery Sergeant.  Eric is the author of “The Judicial War On Men“, “Toxic Feminism” “Attorney Deposition Guide For Questioning A Domestic Violence Expert“, “Living & Working With Evil People“, and “Recovering From Toxic Masculinity Training.”  Purchase Eric’s books at https://aeqpub.com.  Follow him @ https://gettr.com/user/Dr_Nelson

Both men are advisors to the National Coalition For Men (www.ncfm.org).

[i]    Nelson, Eric L. (2013), “Investigating Domestic Violence: Raising Prosecution and Conviction Rates,” Law Enforcement Bulletin, December 2013.  United States Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation.  Available at http://leb.fbi.gov/2013/december/investigating-domestic-violence-raising-prosecution-and-conviction-rates.

Anaheim Police Department Chief Jorge Cisneros at (714) 765-1986, and Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer at (714) 834-3600 to request a thorough investigation of the possibility that Marlena Christiansen falsely accused Chris of child endangerment, and this prompted him to commit suicide.  They should also investigate for possible domestic violence as well.

– – o0o – –

John Davis, J.D., LLM (1953 – ) was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He was educated at Case Western Reserve University (BA) (one of the top ten universities in the United States), Seattle University School of Law (JD), and, New York University School of Law (LL.M post-doctoral) (one of the top ten law schools in the United States). John is fluent in seven languages (including ancient Latin and Greek). He has travelled the world over, many times, and has represented clients, in his thirty five year career, such as the United States Government and the Federation of Russia. He has been a prosecutor four times in his 40 year career.  He has held positions such as Assistant Attorney General, Supreme Court Law Clerk, United States Speaker, and Deputy District Attorney. John is the author of “False Accusations of Rape: Lynching in the 21st Century” and “How to Avoid False Accusations of Rape.”  Purchase John’s books at www.amazon.com.

Eric L. Nelson, Ph.D., is an empirical criminologist specializing in police best practices for the investigation of domestic violence cases.  As a police officer Eric specialized in the investigation of domestic violence, sexual assault, and child abuse cases.  The FBI published Eric’s six step best practice method for the police investigation of domestic violence crime as a best practice.  It triples rates of prosecution and doubles rates of conviction.[i]  He is also a veteran of the Marine Corps, having served in counterintelligence and achieving the rank of Gunnery Sergeant.  Eric is the author of “The Judicial War On Men“, “Toxic Feminism” “Attorney Deposition Guide For Questioning A Domestic Violence Expert“, “Living & Working With Evil People“, and “Recovering From Toxic Masculinity Training.”  Purchase Eric’s books at https://aeqpub.com.  Follow him @ https://gettr.com/user/Dr_Nelson

Both men are advisors to the National Coalition For Men (www.ncfm.org).

[i]    Nelson, Eric L. (2013), “Investigating Domestic Violence: Raising Prosecution and Conviction Rates,” Law Enforcement Bulletin, December 2013.  United States Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation.  Available at http://leb.fbi.gov/2013/december/investigating-domestic-violence-raising-prosecution-and-conviction-rates.

national coalition for men

NCFM Advisers John Davis, Esq. and Eric L Nelson, PhD — False Accusation, Proxy Violence and Men Committing Suicide, The Chris Christensen Tragedy

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