Dad Son Incest

Dad Son Incest




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5/9/22



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A Michigan mom who fell in love with her biological son says a rare “genetic” phenomenon is responsible for their red-hot romance.
Kim West, 57, got pregnant as a teenager, and gave up her baby boy, Ben Ford, for adoption in the mid-1980s.
Ford, who is now 38, tracked down his mother eight years ago, and the pair formed a close bond. Things quickly turned sexual, and they went public with their incestuous relationship in 2016, with West boasting she had “mind-blowing sex” with her son.
The couple has subsequently kept a low profile in a bid to avoid being prosecuted for their illegal sexual relations, but say science is the reason they can’t keep their hands off each other.
“This is not incest, it is GSA. We are like peas in a pod and are meant to be together,” West declared to New Day, speaking about a phenomenon known as “genetic sexual attraction.”
The phenomenon was first identified back in the 1980s by Barbara Gonyo, a woman who ran a Chicago-based support group for adoptees and their newfound relatives. She coined the term “GSA” after noting that numerous people associated with the group became sexually attracted to their family members when they first met as adults. 
Psychologist Corinne Sweet previously told New Day that she has come across the phenomenon while treating patients who had been in foster homes.
“At a genetic level, we are conditioned to find people who look like us attractive,” Sweet stated. “We have an almost tribal connection with family members with similar features. At the same time, people who are adopted or fostered feel deeply rejected. They have experienced a profound wound which isn’t easily healed.”
She further explained: “So when a son meets his birth mother, he feels a great rush of need. There’s an attraction and a longing there, and when it’s combined with the appeal of genetic similarity, it becomes a very powerful and complex cocktail which is incredibly seductive.”
However, other medical experts are skeptical of GSA, with New York City sex therapist Ian Kerner telling Women’s Health that the phenomenon has never been scientifically studied.
“I think that our mating systems tend to seek out genetic difference more than similarity,” he declared. “In the case of incest or romantic love between family members, I think you have to look at it case by case instead of generalizing it as a disorder or genetic condition.”
Meanwhile, clinical psychologist John Mayer bluntly told the magazine: “My professional opinion is that GSA is an excuse to give these people permission to break social norms.”
However, West and Ford say GSA adequately explains the instant attraction they felt for one another.
“I know people will say we’re disgusting, that we should be able to control our feelings, but when you’re hit by a love so consuming you are willing to give up everything for it, you have to fight for it,” West told New Day.
The loved-up mama continued: “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime chance and something Ben and I are not willing to walk away from.”
Her equally shameless son stated: “When I met Kim, I couldn’t think of her as my mom but instead as a sexual being. I had seen a therapist at an adoption support group and had learned about the GSA phenomenon.”
Making their relationship more shocking was the fact that Ford was married at the time they met. The smitten son soon dumped his wife in order to be in a relationship with his mom.
Ford told New Day that he couldn’t get his mother off his mind, saying to his spouse: “Every time I have had sex with you since I met her, I imagine it’s her I am kissing, otherwise I can’t perform.”
Meanwhile, West said it felt as if she and her son had “known each other for years” after they met as adults, describing their sex as “incredible” and “mind-blowing.”
But the couple should be careful about bragging about their hot sex, as incestuous relationships between adults are punishable by up to 15 years in prison in their home state of Michigan.
Anyone found guilty of such an offense would be required to sign the sex offenders registry for life.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pseudonym of an Australian family who practised incest for several generations

^ Jump up to: a b c d "The secret life inside the depraved family who live in the hills of a quiet country town" . www.news.com.au . Retrieved 27 March 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b c Rourke, Alison (12 December 2013). "Australia incest case shocks country" . The Guardian . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Colt incest family: Real story behind five generations" . www.news.com.au . Retrieved 27 March 2019 .

^ "Tragic story of Colt family's generations of incest" . NewsComAu . 27 September 2018 . Retrieved 5 June 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b O'Carroll, Sinead (11 December 2013). "Australia shocked by extreme case of incest, sex abuse and child neglect" . TheJournal.ie . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ "Colt incest family rounded up and jailed: Who's who in the Colts?" . www.news.com.au . Retrieved 27 March 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b " 'Incest' matriarch's lifestyle" . skynews.com.au. Australian Associated Press. 6 November 2014. Archived from the original on 26 November 2015 . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b Julian Morgans (17 December 2013). "Why is Australia's Incest Cult so Shocking?" . Vice . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ Andrew Koubaridis (3 November 2014). " 'Incest' mum Betty Colt jailed for attempted kidnapping of her children" . NewsComAu . Retrieved 12 September 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b "DFaCS (NSW) and the Colt Children [2013] NSWChC 5" . Children's Court of New South Wales . Archived from the original on 10 April 2015 . Retrieved 21 October 2015 .

^ "Roffee, James (2015). When Yes Actually Means Yes in Rape Justice. 72 – 91" . doi : 10.1057/9781137476159.0009 . Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. {{ cite journal }} : Cite journal requires |journal= ( help )

^ "Colt family incest: Police to serve AVOs in notorious case" . www.news.com.au . 20 February 2017 . Retrieved 27 March 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Colt family: Incest clan declares 'family love' on Facebook" . www.news.com.au . 8 March 2018 . Retrieved 27 March 2019 .

^ "Mother of abused children 'Betty Colt' to be deported to New Zealand" . Stuff . 19 October 2015.

^ "Minister awaiting deportation briefing" . odt.co.nz . 20 October 2015.

^ "Life after incest: Colt family matriarch's new life exposed" . The New Zealand Herald . 14 April 2018. ISSN 1170-0777 . Retrieved 27 March 2019 .

^ "Colt family: Incest matriarch Betty Colt's new life after Villawood Detention Centre | | Express Digest" . 14 April 2018.


The Colt family incest case concerns an Australian family discovered in 2012 to have been engaging in four generations of incest beginning with a couple known as Tim and June Colt, who emigrated from New Zealand in the 1970s. They all lived on a farm near Boorowa , New South Wales . [1] [2] The family members' true identities remain unknown to the public. The name "Colt" is a pseudonym used by New South Wales courts and government agencies, as are all of the family's given names.

"June", born in 1948, and "Tim Colt", born in 1943, were originally from New Zealand. June, who was the product of brother-sister incest , married Tim in 1966. The couple had seven children together: Martha, Frank, Paula, Cherry, Rhonda, Betty, and Charlie, before moving to Victoria in the 1970s. [1] Tim Colt began to rape Betty when she was 12. In 1997, Betty, wanting to know if June could donate a kidney to a granddaughter, found out that her mother June was inbred. [3]

Tim formed a musical band with his family. [3]

The family grew to nearly forty members ranging from grandparents to mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, aunts, uncles, nephews, brothers and sisters, all engaging in various forms of incest. Many of the children suffered from deformities and medical problems. School attendance was transient and happened only when welfare officers visited the family, and children needed remedial teaching once there. Some children tortured animals , mutilating their genitals, as a pastime. [1]

Children and adults had regularly engaged in sexual activities which conceived children, some with genetic deformities. Most of the children had fungal infections . In order to hide the pregnancies, the girls would sometimes miscarry on the farm, or fatherhood was attributed to outsiders from outside Australia coming to the country for work or tourism. There were incidents of the girls being tied to trees and raped by the boys. They had no access to running water, showers, toilets or hygiene products. [1] [3]

The case has been described by lead investigator Peter Yeomans as "like nothing I've ever seen," and was considered by many to be so shocking that, in a rare move, the New South Wales Children's Court allowed full details to be made public, albeit with all names changed to pseudonyms for the children's protection, including the family name of "Colt." [4]

After the death of June in 2001 and Tim in 2009, the family was led by Betty Colt. Betty and her younger brother, Charlie, had twelve children together. The family received multiple social security payments, including disability and family support. [5] [6] [7]

Starting from the 1990s, the family was known to frequently relocate between South Australia , Western Australia , and Victoria before locals became suspicious of their activities. They relocated to New South Wales , thirty kilometers outside of the small town of Boorowa , three and a half hours southwest of Sydney . [3] [8] The police ultimately discovered nearly forty members of the family living under squalid conditions in tents and shacks. [7] They sometimes performed as a musical band. [3]

Knowledge of the family came to authorities in June 2010, which led to seven "risk of significant harm" reports. However, an official investigation was not opened until July 2012 when a child reported overhearing another child at a local primary school speaking of an unkempt girl, living in the bush , who was pregnant with a child fathered by a brother. The child overheard the girl state that one of her sisters was pregnant and they did not know which of her brothers was the father. [9]

Over the next year, police tracked the family down and, after obtaining an understanding of the living conditions in the family's encampment, put several children in foster care , including Bobby (Betty's son with her younger brother) and Billy (Betty's son with her older son). Police discovered the living area of thirty-eight members of the family in the bush, living under squalid conditions in tents and shacks, on the outskirts of Boorowa. The family were charged with incest and child neglect . [2]

Betty Colt legally disputed the charges and attempted to regain custody . After tracking the cell phone activities of Betty, police discovered text messages of a sexual nature sent to her son, Bobby. She and Bobby had made plans to abduct Billy from foster care. Genetic testing showed that Bobby was the product of incest between Betty and a father or full brother. [10]

The case has been described as unique because of the reluctance of the victims to come forward. [8] It has been said that there are difficulties in determining the guilt of particular offenders, arguing that behaviour exists on a moral continuum and the law is dichotomous in nature, being an 'absolute concept'. Therefore, even though the victims may have actually consented to the relationships, the law still deems it as criminal. [11]

The Children's Court of New South Wales took the unusual step of publishing its decision permanently removing the children. [2] In the court's findings, the neglect of the children and genetic evidence were viewed as dispositive in the matter. The court held that "there is no realistic possibility of restoration of any of the children [to their biological family]." [10]

A number of attempts by the elder family members to establish connections with the younger have been blocked by the courts. While in care, the children started by often displaying sexual behaviour, whether between themselves or with caretakers, although these habits faded over time. [5] [12] [13]

Australian police attempted to deport Betty to New Zealand, the country of her birth, after the completion of her sentence, but Betty fought the deportation, [14] [15] was released from the deportation center on November 2015, and is now residing in South Australia with her daughter Raylene and at least two other male relatives. [16] [17] She also attempted to contact other relatives through Facebook . [13]


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1933 short story by Ernest Hemingway

^ "Hemingway's Writing Style" (PDF) . The Big Read . National Endowment for the Arts. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-29.

^ Hemingway, Ernest; George Plimpton. "The Art of Fiction No. 21" . Paris Review . Retrieved 6 January 2014 .


The story is a personal narrative that follows the path of Nick Adams as he drives through his hometown with his son. Most of the story is told through memories of Nick's childhood and Father. The story chronicles the relationships between three generations of men.

Important themes in "Fathers and Sons" include father–son relationships, Nick's homecoming, growing up, and role models.

"Fathers and Sons" is a story about Nicholas Adams driving home with his son after a hunting trip in his hometown. Hunting imagery and small-town agriculture make Nick think about his father, who taught him how to hunt. Nick's father had fantastic vision, but Nick says this skill made him nervous. Nick's father was a sentimental man, and Nick says that most sentimental people are both cruel and abused. Nick loved his father, but hated the way he smelled. Nick lost his sense of smell when he started smoking, which he reflects is a good thing because a good sense of smell is not necessary to man. Nick never shared anything with his father past the age of fifteen. Nick's father taught him how to hunt by giving him only three bullets a day. Nick learned much from his father about hunting.

Nick is interrupted from his memories by his son, who asks what it's like to live with Indians and if he can have a gun. Nick tells him that it's his son's decision if he wants to live with Indians, and that he can have a gun at age twelve. Nick thinks about, but does not tell his son, how Trudy “did first what no one has ever done better." He also thinks to himself that shooting one flying bird is like shooting all flying birds—the experience is always just as good. Nick's son does not believe that his grandfather could have been a better hunter than Nick, but Nick says that the man was always disappointed in the way Nick shot. Nick's son expresses regret that they have never yet prayed at his grandfather's grave and concern that he will not be able to pray at his father's grave, and Nick says that he can see that they will need to do that soon.

"Fathers and Sons" is another example of the classic "Hemingway Style." Characterized by economy and iceberg theory , the "Hemingway Style" is the product of obsessive revision. [1] Hemingway himself, when asked about his style, said "I must say that what amateurs call a style is usually only the unavoidable awkwardness in first trying to make something that has not heretofore been made." [2]



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