The domestic violence industry operates under the cloak of secrecy and anonymity, maintaining such policies are necessary to shield victims from their abusers. But every now and then a crack appears in the façade, revealing a sordid panorama of corruption, fraud, and abuse.
On February 28, 2007 the Naples, Fla. citizenry opened their morning newspapers to the jolting headline, “CEO Out at Women’s Shelter: Investigation into Battery Complaint Prompts Departure.” Over the next several months, details would spill out of a woman’s rights activist who had evolved into a self-serving “tyrant,” as one of her colleagues later described her.
The charges surrounded Kathy Herrmann Catino, a former victim of domestic violence and director of the Naples Shelter for Abused Women and Children.
Fifteen years ago Ms. Catino took over the helm of the debt-ridden shelter. She worked tirelessly and proved to be a skilled rainmaker, growing the shelter into a 60-bed facility with a $3.5 million budget, 52 staff members, and 276 volunteers.
But her crusade took on messianic overtones. Believing she was the savior of women, Catino set out to control the Board of Directors and even the personal lives of her employees.
“Kathy Herrmann-Catino ruled as the queen of the fortress she built for too long,” revealed one woman, adding she “was obsessed with the need to control her subordinates and others in the community, and her obsession grew as the Shelter grew.”
“As long as you did as you were told by her, it was all good. Don’t do as you’re told or have a mind of your own, and there were problems,” explained another associate, adding that the shelter director “hates men.”
One saw her as a Captain Queeg in a pantsuit: “You could see the self-satisfaction in her big round eyes and the little smile on her lips whenever she broke a spirit and made an employee cry.”
“I’ve witnessed and been a victim of her abusive style,” revealed a former board member. “She openly admits her son is an abuser …Now we know where he learned it.”
Catino went so far as to monitor employees’ after-hours pursuits. Paul Vincent Zecchino revealed, “she would check on your home life and [find out] if you did not live your life outside of work as she thought you should.”
And as if that wasn’t enough, “Your condition of employment then required you to go to counseling and report that you went,” the man wrote. “The counselor you went to was one that she would pick for you.”
Is this beginning to sound a little like Soviet psychiatry?
Election Day, 2006 marked the beginning of the end. Believing that advancing social change was part of the shelter’s mission, she sent an email to her staff instructing them to inform her whether they had voted.
But a few scofflaws did not respond. So the next day an infuriated Catino broadcast this warning: “OK – you are the folks who have not responded to my several requests for information regarding whether or not you voted on Tuesday. This is your CEO talking – the one who approves your pay check…Testing 1, 2, 3, anyone out there? Please respond.”
The message was clear: If you don’t come clean with the Commissar of Truth, your paycheck might be delayed, or worse.
Problem was, Florida law prohibits voter intimidation. For that misstep, Catino was arrested, booked, and released on bond.
The worst was yet to come.
Three months later Catino decided one of the shelter employees had crossed her one too many times. She wanted an underling to do the dirty work, but the employee refused to go along with the gig. When the tearful woman tried to walk out of the shelter, Catino grabbed her by the arm and yanked her around.
Legally this counts as assault. The security cameras captured the entire incident. Two weeks later, Kathy Catino was history.
The most insightful commentary came from a former associate who revealed, “In reality, Kathy’s very sad life was never healed – it was only a mask she wore – a role she played. She was angry and unhealed, which is why she loved wallowing in her abuse.”
A year later, whatever came of the former shelter director?
Pay a visit to the website of Equality Virginia, a group that advocates for the legalization of homosexual marriage in the state of Virginia. Cathy Catino is now the deputy director of the organization.
The website proudly states Catino “served as CEO of a FL shelter program for nearly fourteen years…While in Naples, Kathy started an outreach program for LBGT people who were victims of partner violence and routinely sheltered gay, lesbian, and transgender people in her program.”
Long live the Revolution.
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amfortas said,
“The most insightful commentary came from a former associate who revealed, “In reality, Kathy’s very sad life was never healed – it was only a mask she wore – a role she played. She was angry and unhealed, which is why she loved wallowing in her abuse.”
This is a joke, right?
Insightful??? Gordon Bennet.
Never ‘healed’? Oh the poor thing. She ‘wallowed in her abuse’? SHE was the friggin’ abuser. She may have claimed that she was abused - who knows, in a past life maybe when she was friggin’ Cleopatra - but what credence do you give to her word?
I know how much credence I have and I save it for credible matters.
July 8, 2008 at 1:20 am
John Maguire said,
Again, Carey, good reporting. Details are good.
July 8, 2008 at 4:56 am
amfortas said,
If only this one shelter and its psychotic management philosphy were an isolated instance. Just how many other ‘careers’ in this hate-filled, hate-driven industry share the same buulying and coercing and manipulative methods? How many shelter managers/directors access public and private funds to finance their reprehensible ends, masquerading as ‘defenders’ of women and promoters of ‘empathy’?
The stirling work of Terri Lynn Tersak and her True Equality Network colleagues working in close harmony with RADAR in exposing criminal activity in shelter operations nationwide is becoming more widely known. She has shown that abuse of individuals and the system is systematic and widespread. Prostitution and tax evasion seems, from her exposes, to be rife. A femi-mafia has formed around such scum women as Kathy Herrmann Catino to exploit the pain of real victims and drown them in a deluge of false ones who are real abusers themslves. Fed by corrupt Family Courts and corrupt police departmants they embezzle monies from wherever they can and ruin anyone who tries to stand up for themslves.
The experience of Erin Pizzy back in the 70’s seems to have stimulated the more entrepreneurial feminazis to greater heights of infamy rather than ring a warning bell to those that had their hearts in a right place.
July 8, 2008 at 5:32 am
panic said,
“the shelter director “hates men.””
Is this a surprise?
It’s her qualification for the job.
July 8, 2008 at 7:04 am
Denise Noe said,
This column reminds me of something I read about the liberal and feminist politician Bella Abzug. A woman who worked in her office quit to work on a construction site. She was asked if the noise bothered her and said that the sounds of drills and other equipment were sweet comparing to Abzug’s yelling!
July 8, 2008 at 8:44 am
Virtue said,
Chickens are coming home.
July 8, 2008 at 9:31 am
lieweary said,
As if the lies and hate against MEN aren’t bad enough! Even the women who stay in these so-called shelters are being demeaned by them.
These houses of dependency are producing abuse, not fighting it. We need a new approach to the problem of domestic violence, which doesn’t foster hate and undermine family values.
Time to fumigate the feminazis out of the bunker.
July 9, 2008 at 10:06 am