A certified educator and psychologist now had to answer to the regional court in Eisenstadt. Accusation: Abuse of a patient. The testimonies of both parties in court varied widely.
After a stroke of fate, a 61-year-old sought help from a psychotherapist. However, after five sessions, the treatment was discontinued. Both the therapist – a multiple academic – and her former patient said this in unison during the trial.
abused patients
There, the 53-year-old had to sit in the dock because the public prosecutor accused her of assaulting her patient.
While she says she didn’t want to continue treating him and that oral sex only happened once in later private meetings when she was drunk, he presents the matter differently: his therapist, who was actually in a committed relationship with another man, and he had mutually attracted each other and then entered into a consensual sexual relationship.
different performances
“Not true. I swear on my children’s lives that we didn’t have real sex.” What Mrs. Getting Rat to make a humorous reference to former US President Bill Clinton, who at the time denied having a sexual relationship with his intern Monica Lewinsky until he condemned a DNA sample as a liar.
The 61-year-old, in turn, testified that he and the woman regularly met at his house and had sex: “When she drove home, she always texted me that I was a sex god. You got that for you, Mrs. Rat .’
Sex is not part of therapy
She then added: “She later told me that she never wanted a real relationship, but that she only needed me to satisfy her libido.” The fact that the case went to court at all was due to the fact that the current therapist of the Mannes advised reporting to the professional association. However, because the sex had taken place outside of therapy, the psychologist was acquitted.
Source: Krone

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.