Forgot to de-friend your wife on Facebook while posting vacation
shots of your mistress? Her divorce lawyer will be thrilled.
Oversharing on social networks has led to an overabundance of
evidence in divorce cases. The American Academy of Matrimonial
Lawyers says 81 percent of its members have used or faced evidence
plucked from Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and other social networking
sites, including YouTube and LinkedIn, over the last five
years.
“Oh, I’ve had some fun ones,” said Linda Lea Viken,
president-elect of the 1,600-member group. “It’s very, very common
in my new cases.”
Facebook is the unrivaled leader for turning virtual reality
into real-life divorce drama, Viken said. Sixty-six percent of the
lawyers surveyed cited Facebook foibles as the source of online
evidence, she said. MySpace followed with 15 percent, followed by
Twitter at 5 percent.
About one in five adults uses Facebook for flirting, according
to a 2008 report by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. But
it’s not just kissy pix with the manstress or mistress that show up
as evidence. Think of Dad forcing son to de-friend mom, bolstering
her alienation of affection claim against him.
“This sort of evidence has gone from nothing to a large
percentage of my cases coming in, and it’s pretty darn easy,” Viken
said. “It’s like, ‘Are you kidding me?'”
Neither Viken, in Rapid City, S.D., nor other divorce
attorneys would besmirch the
attorney-client privilege by revealing the identities of clients,
but they spoke in broad terms about some of the goofs they’ve
encountered:
— Husband goes on Match.com and declares his single, childless
status while seeking primary custody of said nonexistent
children.
— Husband denies anger management issues but posts on Facebook
in his “write something about yourself” section: “If you have the
balls to get in my face, I’ll kick your ass into submission.”
— Father seeks custody of the kids, claiming (among other
things) that his ex-wife never attends the events of their young
ones. Subpoenaed evidence from the gaming site World of Warcraft
tracks her there with her boyfriend at the precise time she was
supposed to be out with the children. Mom loves Facebook’s
Farmville, too, at all the wrong times.
— Mom denies in court that she smokes marijuana but posts
partying, pot-smoking photos of herself on Facebook.
The disconnect between real life and online is hardly unique to
partners de-coupling in the United States. A DIY divorce site in
the United Kingdom, Divorce-Online, reported the word “Facebook”
appeared late last year in about one in five of the petitions it
was handling. (The company’s caseload now amounts to about
7,000.)
Divorce attorneys Ken and
Leslie Matthews, a husband and wife team in Denver, Colo., don’t
see quite as many online gems. They estimated 1 in 10 of their
cases involves such evidence, compared to a rare case or no cases
at all in each of the last three years. Regardless, it’s powerful
evidence to plunk down before a judge, they said.
“You’re finding information that you just never get in the
normal discovery process — ever,” Leslie Matthews said. “People are
just blabbing things all over Facebook. People don’t yet quite
connect what they’re saying in their divorce cases is completely
different from what they’re saying on Facebook. It doesn’t even
occur to them that they’d be found out.”
Social networks are also ripe for divorce-related hate and smear
campaigns among battling spousal camps, sometimes spawning legal
cases of their own.
“It’s all pretty good evidence,” Viken said. “You can’t really
fake a page off of Facebook. The judges don’t really have any
problems letting it in.”
The attorneys offer these tips
for making sure your out-loud personal life online doesn’t wind up
in divorce court:
WHAT YOU SAY CAN AND WILL BE HELD AGAINST YOU
If you plan on lying under oath, don’t load up social networks
with evidence to the contrary.
“We tell our clients when they come in, ‘I want to see your
Facebook page. I want you to remember that the judge can read that
stuff so never write anything you don’t want the judge to hear,'”
Viken said.
BEWARE YOUR FRENEMIES
Going through a divorce is about as emotional as it gets for
many couples. The desire to talk trash is great, but so is the pull
for friends to take sides.
“They think these people can help get them through it,” said
Marlene Eskind Moses, a family law expert in Nashville, Tenn., and
current president of the elite academy of divorce attorneys. “It’s the worst possible time to
share your feelings online.”
A PICTURE MAY BE WORTH … BIG BUCKS
Grown-ups on a good day should know better than to post boozy,
carousing or sexually explicit photos of themselves online, but in
the middle of a contentious divorce? Ken Matthews recalls photos of
a client’s partially naked estranged wife alongside pictures of
their kids on Facebook.
“He was hearing bizarre stories from his kids. Guys around the
house all the time. Men running in and out. And there were these
pictures,” Matthews said.
PRIVACY, PRIVACY, PRIVACY
They’re called privacy settings for a reason. Find them. Get to
know them. Use them. Keep up when Facebook decides to change
them.
Viken tells a familiar story: A client accused her spouse of
adultery and he denied it in court. “The guy testified he didn’t
have a relationship with this woman. They were just friends. The
girlfriend hadn’t put security on her page and there they were.
‘Gee judge, who lied to you?'”