Upload
genviev-martin-bernard
View
76
Download
2
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
GENVIÈV MARTIN BERNARD, DESS, BCH Forensic Hypnosis & Clinical Hypnotherapy
www.GenvievHypnosis.com 503-‐887-‐8034
Forensic Investigative Work
Will McKnight, J.D. – Adjunct Instructor of Criminal Justice
"Genvièv's presentations on Forensic Hypnosis are so powerful and so well received, I am hoping she will be willing to loan us the richness of her expertise again. The students genuinely appreciate her."
Jay Margolis – Investigative Reporter
“Genvièv is the most professional forensic hypnotist in the business. I was looking specifically for a professional hypnotist for a criminal investigation.
Genvièv was courteous, kind, patient and very accommodating to me and my interview subject. I will be recommending her to everyone I meet and will most definitely use her
services again when I require them. I wish her much success because she is a hard worker. She is the best in her field.”
Craig Sklar – Sklar Legal Investigations, LLC.
"The forensic session was professional and effective. Genvièv worked well with us in asking the right questions and bringing to the surface parts of our witness' memory
she hadn't remembered in 12 years. I would return in future situations for this and other cases."
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
GENVIÈV MARTIN BERNARD, DESS, BCH Forensic Hypnosis & Clinical Hypnotherapy
www.GenvievHypnosis.com 503-‐887-‐8034
Criminal Case Files
Forensic Investigative Techniques
Defense recovers vital leads and information previously missing for a decade.
This week, the forensic interview of a key witness in a murder case, held in my office, allowed criminal defense to recover vital leads and missing information pertaining to their investigation, as we witnessed once again, the impeccable functioning of the human brain in the subconscious state. For over a decade, the witness had been unable to remember this critical information. Memory Recovery Within minutes, in the state of hypnosis, the witness was reliving the events of that day, as they had unfolded, many years ago. Shivering as he remembered how chilly the temperature was, the witness began recounting the sounds, scents, sights and every minute detail of that day, as clearly as if it were taking place at the very moment. As the family of the witness was going about their activities, we heard what they were wearing, what they were doing, and where they were positioned as the day progressed. Then came the gunshots, one after the other, deafening explosions tearing through space. The adults instantly shielding the children, and our witness on the phone with 911 within seconds, repeating every word, every detail of the conversation, while he followed the perpetrators, heart racing, as they jumped into their getaway vehicle. We were able to obtain precise information on various identifying details, from the perpetrators' heights and builds, to the color of their skin, the styles, looks and shades of their clothing and what they carried with them as they fled the scene. We heard the screeching turn of the getaway vehicle as it sped through the curve, in front of our witness, slowed down to regain control, and accelerated again down the straightaway. Moving through our questioning, the witnessed described the vehicle in great details, its color, style and model, its condition, emblems, wheels and other peculiarities. "Did you get a chance to see the license plate?" I asked. "I did," the witness responded. At this moment, I made the choice to switch the interview from verbal response to ideo-‐motor response. Considered by experts to be more reliable than verbal response, IMR enables to bypass conscious interference. We all know when we try too hard to remember something, we usually accomplish the very opposite. IMR allows us to keep the witness in a state of deep relaxation, while enabling the information to surface effortlessly.
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
Methodology Ideo-‐Motor Response (IMR) refers to the process whereby thoughts or mental images are brought forth through seemingly automatic or reflexive muscular reactions, often of a minuscule degree, outside of the conscious awareness of the subject. The term comes from "ideo" for idea or mental representation, and "motor" for muscular action. Similarly to the ideo-‐dynamic responses (or reflexes) we experience when we salivate at the idea or sight of food, IMR is a psychophysiological process. I addressed our witness: "In a moment, I am going to ask you a series of questions. If the answer is yes, I'd like you to raise the index finger of your right hand as so (I demonstrated by lifting his index finger), until I press it back down. If the answer is no / N-‐O (I spell out the letters to avoid potential confusion with "know"), I'd like you to raise your pinkie finger on the same hand as so (demonstrating), until I bring it down. Do you understand"? The witness nodded. I began with a couple of test questions to ensure the witness had correctly understood me: "At this moment, you located at our center in Lake Oswego. Is that correct?" The witness' right index finger went up, indicating a yes. "Did you commute to our center here via helicopter?" His pinkie finger went up, indicating a no. We had an understanding.
I continued: "License plates are usually composed of letters and numbers. Looking at the first digit on the plate, is it a number?" Our witness' index finger rose instantly. "Is it number 1?" The witness' pinkie finger rose up. I proceeded by elimination until we had identified the plate's first digit. We moved to the second digit, and got it. Then to the third, and got it.
Things got interesting when we began with the fourth digit. "Is it a number?" I asked. The pinkie finger rose to indicate a "No." "Is it a letter?" The same pinkie finger rose again, indicating another "No." I paused, startled. The witness' face remained completely unexpressive, peaceful, relaxed, not indicating any reaction whatsoever. I repeated the questions: "Is it a number?" No. "Is it a letter?" No. I switched back to verbal and asked the witness: "What is the 4th symbol on the plate?" He answered: "The tree" giving us an Oregon license plate and the solid demonstration of excellent depth. The witness was communicating verbatim the succession of details his eyes noticed on the plate at that moment in time. Anyone in the conscious state would have smiled, laughed or smirked at my line of questioning and momentary puzzlement. However, it is well known that while in the subconscious level of the mind, we respond solely and directly to each question asked. If you ask someone in a deep state of hypnosis if they know what time it is, they will tell you no (or yes, if they just happened to hear the chiming of a clock). If you ask them if they could look at their watch to tell you, they will simply respond yes (if they have a watch), or no (if they don't). They will not look at their watch. They will merely respond that indeed they could. Once the logical, thinking, planning, reasoning, analytical, conscious part of the mind is bypassed, you are dealing with the subconscious part of the mind, which corresponds in many ways to the mind of a two year-‐old. The subconscious mind responds simply and directly to questions without analyzing them. Note, the use of ideo-‐motor response can only be done with subjects in a deep state of hypnosis.
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
Brain Chemistry Why do we consistently and reliably have superior memory retrieval in the state of hypnosis? According to neuroscientists, the deep, attentive, physical, mental and emotional relaxation experienced during hypnosis, as we slow our brain wave cycles, produces significant increases in endorphin levels (our body's natural opiate system), dopamine and norepinephrine levels (enhancing focus and attention), producing higher levels of mental clarity, better brain functioning and superior memory capabilities. Cortisol (the steroid hormone produced by the brain under stress, tension, fear and anxiety, and which tends to alter our focus and concentration abilities) drops down significantly. Electroencephalogram (EEG) and Functional MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) studies of the brain before, during and after hypnosis demonstrate the physiological, chemical and hormonal changes naturally occurring during hypnosis. The hypnotic state is also characterized by profound physical, mental and emotional relaxation. As our muscles, tissues, cells and nerves relax, blood vessels loosen. Our blood is able to flow more fluidly and effortlessly through our entire body, carrying vital oxygen to our brain and essential nutrients to our vital organs. This creates an ideal state for synthetic thought and creativity, functions of the right brain hemisphere, placing us in an optimal condition to learn new information, remember facts and data, memorize languages, analyze complex situations, all of which in a state of profound, restorative calm. According to Senior Special Agent John Kilnapp of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, hypnosis may be the only way to recover the details of a traumatic event crime victims blocked out of their mind. Emotional Balance In addition to helping crime victims and witnesses recover critical information, sometimes missing from their conscious memories for multiple years, hypnosis allows us to address the secondary effects left behind by trauma and enable survivors to finally recover their emotional balance and peace of mind.
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
GENVIÈV MARTIN BERNARD, DESS, BCH Forensic Hypnosis & Clinical Hypnotherapy
www.GenvievHypnosis.com 503-‐887-‐8034
Criminal Case Files
Multijurisdictional Murder Investigation
Prime murder suspect recovers months of missing information.
Due to the traumatic nature of violent crimes, victims and witnesses often experience blocks in their ability to recollect key information and essential elements surrounding the events. Sometimes, the blocks extend over long periods of time, for which the person is unable to recollect any or many of their memories. This was the case of a multijurisdictional murder investigation, in which one of the prime suspects contacted me to undergo forensic hypnosis on the recommendation of his legal and medical teams. Our client was unable to recollect any of his memories covering a period of a month and a half leading to the murder of his child in the spring of 2007. He also had no recollection of the week of the murder and wanted to be assisted in recovering every possible memory that could enable him to understand what had happened to his child. Diagnosed with post-‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), our client indicated he had been going through extensive psychiatric and psychological counseling, twice a week, going over autopsy photos, files and reports, in an attempt to determine the origins of the wounds sustained by his child. Nothing had been successful in enabling him to recover his memories of the events. To assist the ongoing investigation, our goal was to retrieve our client's memories relating to the week of the murder and the events that took place over the course of the month and a half preceding the murder. Our client had never been hypnotized and did not have any knowledge, experience or information in the process or nature of hypnosis. In a state of hypnosis, using tactile, olfactory and visual sensory memories, our client was able to recapture the day-‐to-‐day chain of events leading to the moment he found his child unresponsive.
His memories of a large segment of time had been repressed, in part due to the traumatic nature of the crime, and also due to the weight of potential consequences. Stress, fear and trauma can affect the normal functioning of our memory in a number of ways. In some cases, the traumatic event in itself can be partially or entirely repressed from the conscious memory. In other cases, while memories of the traumatic event remain intact, post-‐traumatic stress disorder can lead to subsequent troubles in the person’s capacity to focus, process, comprehend and retain information following the trauma.
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
When not properly addressed, flashbacks of a traumatic event can start replaying in the mind in the form of intrusive and uncontrollable thoughts. The feeling, often referred to as broken record, is common in post-‐traumatic stress disorder, obsessive-‐compulsive disorder, anxiety and depression. In addition to assisting the memory retrieval process for crime victims and witnesses, hypnosis enables us to address the secondary effects left behind by trauma and empower survivors to recover their emotional balance, strength and peace of mind.
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
GENVIÈV MARTIN BERNARD, DESS, BCH Forensic Hypnosis & Clinical Hypnotherapy
www.GenvievHypnosis.com 503-‐887-‐8034
Criminal Case Files
Marion County Aggravated Assault
Aggravated assault victim recovers information leading to arrest.
In helping crime victims and witnesses recover both their emotional balance and memories, forensic hypnosis provides law enforcement with vital information and leads enabling them to bring resolution to their unsolved cases. In Marion County, Oregon, in an aggravated assault case, the victim came to see us for severe anxiety and PTSD following the attack. Bleeding from the nose and mouth, her jaw fractured, the victim had no recollection of the attack, who had assaulted her, or even wandering her neighborhood streets in a state of shock until she was found by a neighbor. Her memory of being brought to the hospital itself was vague and foggy. Our primary goal was to stabilize the victim’s emotional state. The secondary goal was to retrieve her memories of the attack to assist law enforcement with their ongoing investigation. In a state of hypnosis, the victim was able to remember the time of the attack, the details of the room where the assault took place and seeing her husband’s car in the driveway during the timeframe of the attack. The information collected enabled law enforcement to pursue this specific lead and the husband, who already had a history of physical abuse in the marriage, was later found guilty of the assault. The victim had blocked the memory of her assailant out of her mind, in part due to the traumatic nature of the assault and also because of the fear of what would happen to her if her husband was found guilty and sent to jail. Stress, fear and trauma can affect the normal functioning of our memory in a number of ways. In some cases, the traumatic event in itself can be repressed partially or entirely from the conscious memory. In other cases, while memories of the traumatic event remain intact, post-‐traumatic stress disorder can lead to subsequent troubles in the person’s capacity to focus, process, comprehend and retain information following the trauma.
When not properly addressed, memories of the traumatic event can start replaying in the mind in the form of intrusive and uncontrollable thoughts. The feeling, commonly referred to as broken record, is common in post-‐traumatic stress disorder, obsessive-‐compulsive disorder and depression. In addition to helping crime victims and witnesses recover the missing pieces of their memories, hypnosis enables us to address the secondary effects left behind by trauma and empower survivors to recover their emotional balance, strength and peace of mind.
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
GENVIÈV MARTIN BERNARD, DESS, BCH Forensic Hypnosis & Clinical Hypnotherapy
www.GenvievHypnosis.com 503-‐887-‐8034
FORENSIC, MEDICAL & LEGAL EXPERTISE
v President of the Oregon Hypnotherapy Association – Board Certified & Certified Instructor with the National Guild of Hypnotists – Founder of a Forensic & Clinical Hypnotherapy Center.
v Summa Cum Laude Graduate from the Department of Doctorates of the University of The Sorbonne, Paris with a D.E.S.S. and a Master’s Degree in Foreign Affairs, International Law, Communications and Foreign Languages.
v Emergency Medicine First Responder with the Wilderness Medicine Institute and the Emergency First Response Corporation. Served on Board the Professional Mt. Hood Ski Patrol. Rescue Diver with the World Underwater Federation.
v Forensic expert in high-‐profile assassinations, multijurisdictional murder cases and criminal investigations. Years of expertise assisting major law firms, investigative teams, government and law enforcement officials with the coordination of their cases.
v Forensics training, certifications and discovery boot camp training with Encore Discovery &
EnCase. Professionally trained in forensic discovery by former US Marine and Police Officer.
v International communications liaison in critical situations, criminal investigations and complex negotiations including duties for the Department of Homeland Security, the US Court System and the nation’s largest medical institutions. Liaison between foreign political refugees and American governmental, legal and medical counterparts.
v Production of prosecution exhibits for the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office during the O.J.
Simpson and Menendez Brothers trials.
v Internationally published author, writer and columnist, professionally trained within the European desks of the Associated Press Agency – Paris & London.
v Fluent English, French, Spanish and Italian, with basis in other languages. Native experience
in foreign cultures, markets and economies.
v Black belt program and Assistant Instructor with International Hapkido Federation. Combat, self-‐defense, firearm and weapons training with former Lieutenant in Foreign Legion Anti-‐Terrorist Unit.
© www.GenvievHypnosis.com
GENVIÈV MARTIN BERNARD, DESS, BCH Forensic Hypnosis & Clinical Hypnotherapy
www.GenvievHypnosis.com 503-‐887-‐8034
Forensic Discovery Serving as President of the Oregon Hypnotherapy Association, Genvièv is a Forensic Hypnosis Discovery Expert professionally trained by a retired Police Officer and former Marine with a lifelong experience assisting Police Departments in retrieving the most information possible. She is Board Certified and a Certified Instructor with the National Guild of Hypnotists The niece of Bernard de Gaulle, nephew of General Charles de Gaulle, President of France and Leader of the Resistance Forces during WWII, she comes from a long family tradition of national and international defense. The support, morale and wellness of troops, law enforcement and government officials are at the core of her personal and professional values. Genvièv brings to the table many years of experience in the legal field. After graduating top of her class from the University of La Sorbonne Paris with a Master's Degree and a DESS in Foreign Affairs and International Law, she spent years as an executive in the legal and litigation support fields assisting major law firms with the coordination of their cases. She worked on the production of prosecution exhibits for the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office during the O.J. Simpson and Menendez Brothers trials and followed intensive specialized training in Forensic Discovery and Computer Forensics. She has extensive experience acting as a communication liaison in complex and critical situations, including duties for the Department of Homeland Security and the US Court System. Genvièv also has a decade of experience in combat training, crime awareness, protection and self-‐defense. A member and assistant instructor with the International Hapkido Federation's Black Belt program, she was trained in hand-‐to-‐hand combat, firearms and weapons by a former Lieutenant in the Foreign Legion Anti-‐Terrorist Unit. According to Senior Special Agent John Kilnapp of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, forensic hypnosis may be the only way to recover the details of a traumatic event crime victims blocked out of their mind. Neuroscientists studying electroencephalograms of the alpha and theta brain cycles experienced during hypnosis, explain the deep, attentive physical, mental and emotional relaxation characteristic of this state produces a significant increase in endorphin levels, our body's natural opiate system, as well as in dopamine and norepinephrine levels, enhancing our focus and attention. This creates an ideal state for synthetic thought and creativity, functions of the right brain hemisphere, placing us in an optimal condition to learn new information, remember facts and data, memorize new languages and analyze complex situations. Helping witnesses and victims enhance their clarity of mind, enables us to revisit their recall, thereby providing law enforcement officials with vital information and leads. When conducted properly, forensic hypnosis can be an important element in the preparation and outcome of a trial.