A distraught father
struggling with overdue child support
obligations and adverse family court
decisions committed suicide on the
steps of the downtown San Diego courthouse
Monday. Angrily waving court documents,
43 year-old Derrick Miller walked
up to court personnel at the entrance,
said "You did this to me,"
and shot himself in the head.
Miller is one of
300,000 Americans who have taken their
own lives over the past decade--as
many Americans as were killed in combat
in World War II. America is in the
throes of a largely unrecognized suicide
epidemic, as suicide has become the
eighth leading cause of death in the
United States today, and the third
leading cause of death among adolescents.
All Americans recognize that our country
is rife with violent crime, but few
know that 50% more Americans kill
themselves than are murdered.
Who is committing
suicide?
For the most part,
men. According to the National Institute
of Mental Health, males commit suicide
four times as often as females do,
and have higher suicide rates in every
age group. There are many risk factors
for suicide, including substance abuse
and mental illness, but the two situations
in which men are most likely to kill
themselves are after the loss of a
job, and after a divorce.
Because our society
strongly defines manhood as the ability
to work and provide for one's loved
ones, unemployed men often see themselves
as failures and as burdens to their
families. Thus it is not surprising
that while there is no difference
in the suicide rate of employed and
unemployed women, the suicide rate
of unemployed men is twice that of
employed men.
It is for this reason
that economic crises generally lead
to male suicide epidemics. During
the Midwest farm crisis of the 1980s,
for example, the suicide rate
of male farmers tripled. A sharp increase
in male suicide occurred after the
destruction of Flint, Michigan's 70
year-old auto industry, as documented
in the disturbing 1989 film "Roger
and Me." Some suicide experts
fear a rise in suicide related to
our current economic downturn.
The other most common
suicide victims are divorced and/or
estranged fathers like Derrick Miller.
In fact, a divorced father is ten
times more likely to commit suicide
than a divorced mother, and three
times more likely to commit suicide
than a married father. According
to Los Angeles divorce consultant
Jayne Major:
"Divorced men are often devastated
by the loss of their children. It's
a little known fact that in the United
States men initiate only a small number
of the divorces involving children.
Most of the men I deal with
never saw their divorces coming, and
they are often treated very unfairly
by the family courts."
According to Sociology
Professor Augustine Kposow of
the University of California at Riverside,
"The link between men and their
children is often severed because
the woman is usually awarded custody.
A man may not get to see his
children , even with visitation rights.
As far as the man is concerned, he
has lost his marriage and lost his
children and that can lead to depression
and suicide."
There have been a
rash of father suicides directly related
to divorce and mistreatment by the
family courts over the past few years.
For example, New York City Police
Officer Martin Romanchick, a Medal
of Honor recipient, hung himself after
be ing denied access to his children
and being arrested 15 times on charges
brought by his ex-wife, charges the
courts deemed frivolous. Massachusetts
father Steven Cook, prevented from
seeing his daughter by a protection
order based upon unfounded allegations,
committed suicide after he was jailed
for calling his four-year-old daughter
on the wrong day of the week. Darrin
White, a Canadian father who was
stripped of the right to see his children
and was about to be jailed after failing
to pay a child support award tantamount
to twice his take home pay, hung himself.
His 14 year-old daughter Ashlee later
wrote to her nation's Prime Minister,
saying, "this country's justice
system has robbed me of one of the
most precious gifts in my life, my
father."
We'll never know
exactly why Derrick Miller took his
life and if his suicide could have
been prevented. What we do know
is that male suicide is one of America's
most serious public health issues,
and it is time to address it.
www.GlennJSacks.com |