Danielles Death By Rabbi Daniel Lapin, president of Toward Tradition, a Seattle-based national pro-family coalition of Jews and Christians. |
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On March 1, a day after the body of Danielle Van Dam was identified, the San Diego Union-Tribune published a heart-rending account of parents and school counselors trying to explain to children how it could happen that seven-year-old Danielle was kidnapped and killed. "Mommy," a boy was quoted as saying, "I don't want anyone to steal me." Counselors advised parents "to listen to their children's fears and acknowledge them." The unstated assumption of much of the press coverage of the tragedy has been just this: Children are afraid, counselors and parents are stumbling to find something comforting to say, for what happened to Danielle could as easily happen to any of our children. Since the grim discovery was made, the nation has absorbed the message that Danielle's death was an event without explanation or reason. Or was it? On the morning of February 2, Danielle was found to be missing from her bed. The man who has been arrested for her murder is 50-year-old David Westerfield. Reportedly a child-porn enthusiast, he is a neighbor of Danielle's parents, Damon and Brenda van Dam. That night, says the accused kidnapper, he and Mrs. Van Dam had been dancing at a local bar. Mrs. Van Dam denies dancing with Westerfield, but she does admit being out till 2 A.M. without her husband. Nor do the Van Dams deny the stories reported in Newsweek, stories that say they are active "swingers" with a taste for wife swapping. The Van Dams say their lifestyle has "nothing to do" with Danielle's abduction. Let us be clear. This horrible death can be blamed only on the man who kidnapped Danielle. But if the Van Dams are indeed "swingers," if Mrs. Van Dam was carousing without her husband until rather late, then these parents who deserve our sympathy no matter what their follies and vices may be will have something in common with the parents of many other abducted children, beyond the bare fact that they have lost a child. For these terrible events do not, for the most part, occur at random. The National Institute for Missing and Exploited Children supplies the figures. In 1997, 24 percent of abducted children were abducted by strangers. About half, 49 percent, were kidnapped by family members, typically a divorced parent. Another 27 percent were kidnapped by an acquaintance. In other words, 73 percent of abducted children suffered that fate due in part to lifestyle choices their parents made: the choice to divorce, or to befriend sleazy characters. When the media, by ignoring these data, give the impression that child kidnapping could happen to any family, the wholesome no less than the unwholesome, we are once again being grievously misled. This same notion that a certain kind of misfortune, in choosing victims, makes no distinction between wholesome and unwholesome animated the AIDS scare of the late 1980s. Back then, the media and AIDS activists asserted that the disease was about to erupt among the population of heterosexuals who are not abusers of intravenous drugs. It never did. AIDS, it's now acknowledged, is a killer with a marked preference for people who engage in particular activities: anal sex and needle sharing. It does occasionally happen that an unknown drifter will invade the life of an upstanding family and steal and murder their child. That is what happened to 12-year-old Polly Klaas, abducted from a slumber party in Petaluma, California, in 1993. It is what happened in 1981 to six-year-old Adam Walsh, whose father, TV host John Walsh of America's Most Wanted, initiated a campaign to place photos of missing children on milk cartons and junk mail. That well-intended campaign has supported the misconception that children go missing by chance. The brief biographical sketch of the missing child never indicates the family dysfunction that likely contributed to making the abduction possible. Random kidnapping is not what happened to Danielle van Dam, and the fact is worth considering. For our actions have consequences often unintended, often for future generations, often tragic and parents would do well to remember this. |
A murder trial currently underway in Southern California is proving that alternative sexual lifestyles practiced by consenting adults in the privacy of their own homes can have unforeseen consequences for society at large and in this case, may have cost the life of a little girl.
Seven-year-old Danielle van Dam was discovered missing from her bedroom on Saturday morning, February 2, by her parents Brenda and Damon van Dam. On February 27, her badly decomposed and nude body, minus a foot and reproductive organs, was discovered along a rural roadside in East San Diego County. Because of the bodys condition, the medical examiner was unable to determine the exact cause of death or if little Danielle had been sexually molested.
David Westerfield, a 50-year-old self-employed design engineer and van Dam neighbor, has been charged with Danielles kidnapping and murder. He is also charged with possession of child pornography after police found thousands of pornographic images on his computer.
In opening arguments last week, prosecutor Jeff Dusek told jurors that DNA evidence found in Westerfields motor home and on a jacket would conclusively link him to Danielle, and that his possession of child pornography would supply the motive needed to convict him of her murder.
However, the prosecutions case against Westerfield has been complicated by the van Dams' debauched lifestyle. Westerfields defense attorney Steven Feldman argued that Brenda and Damon van Dams risqué behavior including their promiscuous sexual relationships and marijuana and alcohol use opened their home to several people who could have abducted and killed their daughter.
SWINGING, DRUGS, AND ROCK-AND-ROLL
On February 1, the night Danielle vanished from her home in the upscale San Diego suburb of Sabre Springs, her mother and two female friends, Denise Kemal and Barbara Easton, partied at a local bar. Before leaving for the bar, the three women drank alcohol and smoked marijuana in the van Dams' garage, where a door leading into the house had been altered so that Danielle and her two brothers, then aged 5 and 9, could be locked out from inside the house. Damon van Dam also admitted drinking and smoking marijuana with the women before they left.
Damon stayed home with the children while Brenda, Barbara and Denise went to nearby Dads Café. There, according to court testimony, they continued drinking, danced provocatively, and went outside at one point to smoke more marijuana supplied by another family friend, Rich Brady. They also ran into Westerfield, whom Brenda and Danielle had visited earlier in the week to sell Girl Scout cookies.
When the bar closed, the women described as toasted by that time came back to the van Dam home with Brady and another male friend, Keith Stone, who had expressed a sexual interest in Easton. Upon arriving home, Brenda van Dam noticed that an alarm light was in the house. She and Kemal searched the house and found that the side garage door was open. While they did so, Easton went upstairs to the van Dam bedroom, where she got into bed with Damon van Dam, rubbed his back, and they kissed.
Noticing Eastons absence, Brenda van Dam went upstairs and found her with her husband. She told the two to come downstairs to join the others. Shortly thereafter, all four guests left, and Brenda and Damon went to bed. Sometime after 3:00 a.m., Damon van Dam awoke to find another alarm light blinking. Going downstairs, he discovered the kitchen sliding glass door open. He closed it and went back to bed without checking on the children. Hours later, when Danielle failed to emerge from her bedroom, the van Dams called 911 to report her disappearance.
SWAPPING OR SEX PARTY?
Initially, the van Dams lied to police detectives about their sexual activities and acquaintances. However, on the stand last week, Brenda and Damon confirmed that many of the rumors about their lifestyle which had circulated throughout San Diego since their daughter's disappearance were true.
In addition to his activities the night of Danielles disappearance, Damon van Dam testified that, on at least three occasions, he had sex or tried to have sex with Easton in the presence of his wife. He and Brenda also admitted having had sex with Kemal and her husband, Andy, at a Halloween party in October 2000.
When asked by the prosecuting attorney if she had had a sex party at her home the night of Danielles disappearance, Brenda van Dam denied it, saying, There has never been a sex party at my house. She subsequently admitted to the defense attorney during cross-examination that she and Damon had engaged in sex with the Kemals during the Halloween party but said, I dont consider that to be a sex party. Kemal similarly downplayed the Halloween party, saying it was more like a swap and adding that the van Dam children were not in the home that night.
To date, the remaining van Dam children have not been removed from the home.
MOLES: SWINGING MOCKS MARRIAGE
According to The San Diego Union-Tribune, the Westerfield trial is one of the most closely scrutinized trials in San Diego County history. Its aspects, including the van Dams sexual proclivities, have generated a raucous public discourse ranging from pedophilia to proper parenting.
The case also turns a spotlight on organizations like the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom (NCSF), based in Washington, D.C., that advocates alternative sexual expressions such as swinging (wife-swapping), polyamory (multiple simultaneous sexual relationships), and consensual sadomasochism. See the April 18, 2002 C&F Report article to learn more about the full agenda of the NCSF, which now works closely with major homosexual and transsexual activist groups such as the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, GLAAD (Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) and GenderPAC.
Cindy Moles, director of Concerned Women for America of San Diego and Imperial Counties, has followed the van Dam case and said: This lifestyle cheapens marriage and reduces it to nothing more than a contract between two people who share a house and a checkbook. The swingers movement makes a total mockery out of fidelity and marriage, and threatens the children who would normally find safe haven in a home with parents who are faithful to each other.
Moles said it is interesting that just as special interest groups worked to normalize and legalize homosexuality, organizations like the NCSF are advocating for this appalling swinging lifestyle.
Child advocate Douglas Howard Pierce warned on his Millennium Childrens Fund Web site: America needs to be aware about another type of hidden swingers called family affair. This is when the children are involved in family group sexual encounters. This type of underground activity is prevalent via the Internet and chat rooms titled family affair.
LIFESTYLES HAVE CONSEQUENCES
San Diego pro-family attorney Bill Trask offered the following analysis of the van Dam story: In a criminal case, the defense has to produce enough evidence that causes the jury to doubt that the defendant committed the crime. One way of doing that is to show that there is another reasonable explanation in this case, that the van Dams opened their doors to a variety of unsavory characters.
I think what this case boils down to is a principle that is generally applicable regardless of what the lifestyle is, and that is that even though in our society we are free to engage in any lifestyle we want, it doesnt mean that were free from the consequences of that lifestyle, Trask added.
Allyson Smith, a regular contributor to Culture & Family Report, is a freelance reporter based in San Diego, California.