Picking Up the Pieces
Husband of Teacher Accused of Having Sex With Student Stunned, Confused
Sept. 16, 2004 - The estranged husband of a 23-year-old Tampa teacher accused of having sex with her 14-year-old student says he still loves his wife - even after filing for divorce last week.
"I am in love with her. You can't turn love off," Owen Lafave told ABC News' Cynthia McFadden.
Speaking for the first time to the national press since his wife, Debra, was accused three months ago, the 26-year-old banker also said he is still making sense of his wife's alleged actions.
"I just stand here confused. I struggle with everyday life," he said.
Authorities say Debra Lafave had sex with the boy in her classroom, in the home she shared with her husband and, on one occasion, in the back of her SUV while it was being driven by the student's 15-year old cousin.
Lafave was charged with lewd and lascivious conduct with a minor and faces prison time if convicted. She pleaded not guilty to the charges on July 19, 2004 her first wedding anniversary.
Unreal Situation
Owen and Debra met in high school, but only started dating in college.
Records from earlier in their relationship clearly illustrate a woman in love. In tape recordings she made, she told him: "I just wanted you to know that I'm thinking about you. Close your eyes and just picture me kissing you."
Debra wrote in a photo album that she made: "I love my Owen because he is so sensitive, he completes me. He is all I have ever dreamed of."
"It's tough to hear," Owen told McFadden. "It's tough to look at."
Owen still has fond memories of their wedding day. "It was a beautiful wedding," he said. When he saw Debra walking down the aisle, he says, "I was just awestruck. She looked beautiful. And she took my breath away."
But Owen says he could not have begun to imagine a year ago what's happened since. "This whole situation is just bizarre. And there's often times when I just think that it, it just can't be real. It can't be happening to me," he said.
Owen says he even met the boy in question when they were on a school field trip.
He says he remembers what the boy and a friend of his were wearing, because it stood out.
"He was wearing a UPS jersey, with the UPS hat, cocked to the side. And his partner in crime was wearing a vintage Tampa Bay Buccaneers jersey, bright orange," Owen said.
Unexpected Circumstances
By all appearances, the Lafaves were a successful match. He was a successful banker. She was a teacher. They were a married couple with their own home.
Could it all have come too fast, too early? "I think, at the time, obviously no," Owen said. "I had thought I had found the perfect bride."
"I can't imagine I didn't know her," Lafave says today. "I've been with her for five years. It's just not the same Debra that I fell in love with."
Lafave says he didn't see any warning signs. "If I had saw anything coming I would have never married her," he said.
But a closer look at their relationship reveals some clues about the state of their happiness.
Unfulfilled Expectations
Debra had once dreamed of a different life, Owen said. At one time, she aspired to be a singer. "She sung like an angel," he said. "She was amazing. Beautiful voice."
She also had a famous boyfriend in that former life: Nick Carter of The Backstreet Boys. Owen said it was a serious relationship at the time. Debra had also been a model, wearing racy outfits for a car magazine.
But she would later have emotional problems, according to Owen, and had recently lost her sister to a drunken driver. Owen said his wife was taking antidepressants.
At home, Owen says, it was he who did the cooking, the laundry, and eventually a lot of the cleaning. And he didn't like it. "It's not what you signed up for when you get married," he said.
In spite of his anger, his pain, and their breakup, Owen refuses to trash his soon-to-be former wife.
He says he still wants to protect her. "It's a tough position to be in," he said. He doesn't know when he'll let go of her. "Only time will tell," he said. "I don't know."
3 in 4 B.C. boys on street sexually exploited by women
VANCOUVER - Canada's largest study into the sexual exploitation of street kids and runaways has shattered some myths about who the abusers might be - with the most surprising finding being that many are women seeking sex with young males.
"Some youth in each gender were exploited by women with more than three out of four (79 per cent) sexually exploited males reporting exchanging sex for money or goods with a female," said Elizabeth Saewyc, associate professor of nursing at the University of British Columbia and principal investigator for the study conducted by Vancouver's McCreary Centre Society.
"I must admit it wasn't something we were expecting."
Up to 64,000 women in UK 'are child-sex offenders'
After Plymouth case shocked the nation, police say number of women abusing children
The Guardian UK and The Observer
4 October 2009
Researchers from the Lucy Faithfull Foundation (LFF), a child protection charity that deals with British female sex offenders, said its studies confirmed that a "fair proportion" of child abusers were women. Donald Findlater, director of research and development, said results indicated that up to 20% of a conservative estimate of 320,000 suspected UK paedophiles were women.
Female Teacher Charged With Sex Assault on Seventh-Grade Boy
Associated Press / Fox News
MORRISTOWN, N.J. — A 35-year-old seventh-grade teacher was charged with having sex with one of her students at least 20 times at the teacher's home.
Jodi Thorp, 35, surrendered to authorities Monday on charges of aggravated sexual assault, aggravated sexual contact and endangering the welfare of a child. Prosecutors claim she had sex with the boy at her Mendham home between June 2001 and September 2002. The boy is now 15.
Mother confesses to sex with sons
Had intercourse with 2 teenagers
Pleads guilty to incest charges
A Kitchener woman has pleaded guilty to having sexual intercourse with her two teenage sons on separate occasions.