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Cheating Husbands and Wives Caught in WebTechnology makes infidelity easier, but it also makes getting caught practically inevitable.Joanna Stern 12/18/2007 ![]() Rena Holloway (who preferred not to use her real name) was suspicious. The 36-year-old mother of four from Chicago had become uncomfortable with her husband's rampant cell phone use and that his voicemail password had been changed from the usual family code. His call history was blank—a sign he'd erased it. There were also paw prints on the family desktop Web browser: He had been logging into a separate e-mail account.
One morning, while her husband was in the shower, she flipped open his cell phone and there it was: an illicit text message. Holloway, who had been through this before, didn't stop there. She wrote down the phone number and used Intelius' Web service to look up her husband's cell phone records. Lo and behold, the number of the text sender appeared numerous times on her husband's outgoing call list. Today, Holloway and her husband are separated.
As you might imagine, Holloway isn't alone. "As technology gets more and more sophisticated, cheaters are going to have a greater risk of getting caught, especially because so many of them are meeting online and communicating there," said infidelity expert Ruth Houston, author of Is He Cheating On You? "The evidence is all in the cyber realm," she said.
Net Helps Cheating Husbands and WivesAccording to relationship experts like Houston, cheating is on the rise because technology makes finding a willing partner easier. The unfaithful don't have to scour bars or cultivate relationships; they can simply visit a site like The Ashley Madison Agency (www
.ashleymadison.com), a site dedicated to helping married people find other partners. The site, whose tagline is "When monogamy becomes monotony," boasts almost a million members in the U.S. alone. Stats may convey the popularity of the site among cheaters, but creating a profile of our own was equally telling. Within 20 minutes of setting up a profile, in which we said we were a 30-year-old "attached female seeking males," we received seven messages from men who were married or "attached." One member, whom we'll call Rick, traded messages with us on the site. He told us how he keeps his extramarital relations a secret from his wife and asked that we not use his real name. "I log into Ashley Madison a few times a day to see what else is out there," Rick said. "I always make sure to erase the Web-browser history on the family computer if that's the one I'm on."
Rick has met face to face with women from the site. "I typically am traveling for work, so I use my laptop on the road to communicate," he said.
Divorce lawyers and marriage counselors agree that Internet-abetted infidelity—romance originating in chat rooms and fueled by e-mail—is now one of the leading contributors of marital breakdowns. A 2005 study conducted by the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers indicated that 63 percent of divorce cases involve some form of online infidelity. (This infidelity can refer to relationships that began on the Internet or were spurred on by electronic communication.)
"I couldn't count the number of cases when there has been e-mail evidence of adulterous relationships," said Gaetano Ferro, a matrimonial attorney and president of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers. "It often happens that a prospective client comes in [saying that their] spouse has a boyfriend or girlfriend, and they drop a stack of e-mails on my desk."
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