Wednesday, November 11, 2009

A story of hopeful love, turned to violence and murder

This is something I decided to share on all of the blogs because I feel that through Mildred Muhammad’s pain, society as a whole can see yet again a bit of insight into a Domestic Violence Victim.  Here is a Survivor that dealt with the “hidden” affects of DV, those that aren’t seen but leave deep scars.

“But in general this book is about domestic violence when there are no scars — the domestic abuse that strains the victims' credibility in some minds because there are no broken bones or blackened eyes, and because the perpetrator is such a smooth monster, and John Muhammad was certainly that. He once told his wife, “I'm going to fix it so that no one will ever believe you or want you.” Imagine that, after John Muhammad kidnapped his and Mildred's three children and fled with them to Antigua, where he stayed for 18 months. There were people who knew where her children were, but for whatever reason (maybe, they were afraid of John, too) wouldn't give Mildred any relief.”

This is something I feel that anyone dealing with those going through Domestic Violence should read.  I have yet to read the book myself, but from what I’ve read and heard, it sounds like there were warning signs that could have prevented this monster from removing himself from “Behind Closed Doors” into becoming a monster that thousands feared.  We’ve all “met” the monster, now I feel it’s time to meet the Survivor……

A story of hopeful love, turned to violence and murder

Betty Winston BayĆ© • October 27, 2009

One day my ex-husband and the father of my children will be executed. I am still processing this fact. … Until that day execution seems like just another word. I cannot begin to comprehend how I will feel when this day comes, but I will have to lead my children through their grief.

MILDRED MUHAMMAD,
author of ‘Scared Silent'

The man that Mildred Muhammad loved, married in 1983 and bore three children for was a charming liar and cunning manipulator. He's John Allen (Williams) Muhammad, aka “The D.C. Sniper,” who in 2002, with teenager Lee Boyd Malvo, engaged in a three-week killing spree during which 13 people were shot, 10 of them fatally. The two also are implicated in other murders in Alabama and Tacoma, Wash. Their D.C.-area victims were randomly chosen as they engaged in the most mundane things: mowing grass, pumping gasoline, walking across a mall parking lot and waiting for a school bus. Thus, the terrifying fear as people wondered who would be next.

When they met in Baton Rouge, La., John Williams cast himself as the handsome prince come to sweep Cinderella off her feet. John immediately went to work on Mildred's heart. His tears appealed to her sensitive side as did his tale of a sad childhood in New Orleans, where his mother died of breast cancer. John had big dreams and once looked Mildred in the eye and said, “I'm looking for someone to share my life.” That did it for Mildred, who said that John had her at a disadvantage because “my ideas of how a man should behave in a relationship were all romanticized and based on television, movies and hearsay.”

What Mildred didn't know was that John was already married. Buy the book to learn the rest of that story.

But in general this book is about domestic violence when there are no scars — the domestic abuse that strains the victims' credibility in some minds because there are no broken bones or blackened eyes, and because the perpetrator is such a smooth monster, and John Muhammad was certainly that. He once told his wife, “I'm going to fix it so that no one will ever believe you or want you.” Imagine that, after John Muhammad kidnapped his and Mildred's three children and fled with them to Antigua, where he stayed for 18 months. There were people who knew where her children were, but for whatever reason (maybe, they were afraid of John, too) wouldn't give Mildred any relief.

Perhaps John Muhammad suffered post-traumatic stress after serving in the Gulf War, but even before he joined the Army, there were clues that he may have been a troubled young man. When things didn't go his way — even if it was while playing tag or Monopoly with his children — John would pout and change the rules.

Mildred's story of life with an abusive man who became a notorious killer is the tale of a woman fighting desperately to save her sanity, her physical self and her children. Hers is also a story of the power of prayer and friends and strangers who intervened. At the back of the book, there are resources for domestic abuse victims, for the people who love them or who simply want to gain a better understanding of the complex issues involved. The book even includes a “safety plan” with advice on how to prepare to get away from an abusive situation and what to take when you leave.

With John Muhammad behind bars, Mildred and her children finally are free from the terror. She remarried in 2007. Her son is in college, and her two daughters plan to attend colleges of performing arts. Mildred is on the speaking circuit; she's on the board of several organizations; consults with the federal Office for Victims of Crimes; and she's created “After the Trauma” to assist victims of domestic violence.

But for all the good stuff, a fairy-tale happy ending is still elusive because, as Mildred said, there's the execution to be dealt with, and she wrote, “My brain still has difficulty coming to terms with the fact that John was going to kill me; that I am not supposed to be here. I was supposed to be a statistic. And at times, my imagination still presents me a gruesome and graphic picture of a bloody, dead me.”

Original Article

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Man jailed for 25 years for hammer attack on pregnant girlfriend

Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] Whos Killing Families?.

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http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/oct/14/hammer-attack-pregnant-girlfriend-wales

 

Man jailed for 25 years for hammer attack on pregnant girlfriend

Simon Morris tried to murder Nerys Price while she slept at their home in north Wales

Simon Morris and Nerys Price

Nerys Price and her former boyfriend Simon Morris, who was convicted of attempting to murder her. Photograph: North Wales Police/PA

A "wicked and callous" father-to-be was jailed for 25 years today for trying to murder his heavily pregnant girlfriend, hoping to benefit from her will and start a new life with another woman.

Simon Morris, 37, attacked Nerys Price, 35, with a hammer while she slept in bed at their home in Prestatyn, north Wales, in August last year.

Morris, who denied attempted murder and attempted child destruction, hit his partner in the head and covered up his crime to look like a burglary gone wrong.

Morris, a council highways officer, had previously persuaded Price that they should change their wills, making him her sole beneficiary. He stood to inherit several hundred thousand pounds on her death, Mold crown court heard.

Following the attack Price was taken to hospital, where she was treated for a fractured skull and later gave birth by emergency Caesarean section to a daughter, Freya, now 14 months.

Standing in the dock, Morris wiped away tears as Judge Merfyn Hughes QC told him he had committed a "shocking" crime.

"It was a wicked and callous attempt to rid yourself of a partner who was willing to have your child and who had done nothing but give you love and affection," the judge said.

Morris was jailed for 25 years for the attempted murder of Price and a further 25 years, to be served concurrently, for the attempted destruction of his daughter.

He looked to the floor, shaking his head, as he was sent down.

In her victim impact statement, which was read to the court, Price spoke of her devastation at Morris's betrayal.

She said she had considered herself fortunate to be expecting his child and they had planned the baby together. She loved being pregnant and she loved "Bob" - the couple's pet name for their unborn baby.

"Now, when I see other pregnant women I feel cheated because my memories of that time are tainted because of Simon Morris's deceit. I believed I had a loving and doting partner and bright future. I loved and trusted Simon implicitly and I had no doubts about the relationship."

She added: "I still can't believe he was responsible for all this and I feel totally stupid. I feel angry that someone I loved so implicitly could do this to me and our unborn child.

"I worry for Freya's future. How do I explain what her father did and tried to do?

I worry that she will be bullied at school and that she will be an only child. I worry that one day she will want to meet him and he will tell her all sorts of lies and she will blame me."

The trial heard that Morris, a former nightclub bouncer who is 6ft 6in and 15 stone, hit Price twice in the head with the sharp end of a bricklayer's hammer when she was 38 weeks pregnant.

She told the jury that she asked Morris to call the police but eventually had to do it herself.

When she was released from hospital, Price stayed at her father's house and started to have doubts about Morris's "peculiar behaviour", the court heard. He was arrested eight days after the attack.

Patrick Harrington QC, prosecuting, told the jury that Morris attacked Ms Price for "two of the oldest motives known to us all".

He said the defendant planned to build a new life with another woman, Kate Christian, a mother of two he had met in a bar several months before.

Harrington said Morris planned to pay for it all with the cash he stood to inherit on the death of Price. The money would largely have come from her pension.

After the sentencing, Price said: "I am relieved that this horrific ordeal is finally over. Clearly, justice has been done today.

"I can finally start to rebuild my life whilst ensuring that my daughter is secure, happy and surrounded by those who love her."

She paid tribute to "my gorgeous bonny daughter who has made this nightmare bearable".

Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] Whos Killing Families?.

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Child deaths couple 'had split'

Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] Whos Killing Families?.

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Yolande Molemohi, four, and her brother Theo, two

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/manchester/8307500.stm

The children were pronounced dead on arrival at hospital

A man held on suspicion of murdering his two children was estranged from his wife, police have said.

Theo Molemohi, aged two, and his sister Yolande Molemohi, aged four, were found unconscious by their mother at a flat in Whalley Range, Manchester.

Attempts were made to resuscitate the pair on Wednesday morning but they died in hospital later. Post-mortem examinations are being carried out.

Their 37-year-old father is being held on suspicion of murder in hospital.

Det Supt Geoff Wessell, of Greater Manchester Police (GMP), said the couple were estranged.

'Traumatic scene'

The children spent the weekend with their father and were being visited by their mother on Wednesday morning.

"This is a quite horrendous incident for the family and for the officers who attended," said the detective.

"What I can say is that no other person is being sought in connection with this incident at this time.

"That male remains in custody and is due to be interviewed later today."

Det Spt Geoff Wessell: "This is a quite horrendous incident for the family"

The father lived in Lansbury House, the three-storey block where the children were found, which is managed by Contour Housing.

The block is on a street in Whalley Range, a suburb two miles south of the city centre.

The housing association said it was co-operating with the police and a spokesman offered his condolences to the family of the children.

Mr Wessell said the children's mother, believed to be studying for a PhD, was "extremely distressed" and is being comforted by specialist family liaison officers.

"They [the children] were found in a bedroom with the father there next to them. He lived at the address," he added.

"She had gone back for clothes and let herself in and was confronted by this traumatic scene."

The detective said the couple, who moved to the UK from either South Africa or Zimbabwe in 2003, had some previous contact with agencies in the city.

But although they were not known to police it is not clear which agencies they were known to, he added.

Forensic science investigators remained at the scene throughout the day examining the ground floor flat and part of the gardens outside its patio door.

The results of post-mortem examinations to establish the cause of the children's deaths are expected to be released later.

Cas Page, headteacher at Our Lady's RC Primary School, said four-year-old Yolanda Molemohi was a "lovely, happy, bubbly little girl with such a wonderful smile who was loved by everyone in school".

Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] Whos Killing Families?.

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Missing N. Texas boy found in Florida Kidnapped by NonCustodial Father

Note: Cross posted from (blogger angelzfury) Battered Women, Battered Children, Custody Abuse.

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http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/wfaa/county-denton/stories/wfaa091014_wz_justinamberalert.217023a7b.html

Missing N. Texas boy found in Florida

06:21 PM CDT on Wednesday, October 14, 2009

WFAA.com Staff

INTERACTIVE MAP: The toddler was taken from his mother's home in Justin, in southwestern Denton County

Jose and Malakai Mascorro

Justin PD

Jose and Malakai Mascorro

Also Online

LINK: Wanted poster


MORE: Crime news


MORE: Denton County news

JUSTIN — A young boy has been found safe after an Amber Alert was issued for the one year old after his non-custodial father, David Mascorro, was suspected of taking the boy from his mother's home in Denton County.

Authorities said the boy was found with Mascorro in Tallahassee. Both the son and the father were safe.

Justin police issued an alert Wednesday morning for one-year-old Malakai Izaak Mascorro.

Detectives said Mascorro snatched Malakai from his mother's Denton County home in the middle of the night while she was sleeping.

The suspect took all cell phones in the house and disabled the residence phone so that the child's mother would be unable to call for help, police said.

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Child abuse: when family courts get it wrong By Kathleen Russell

Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] A Human Rights Issue-Custodial Justice.

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http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/1014/p09s02-coop.html

Child abuse: when family courts get it wrong

States must reform a system that too often awards custody to the abusive parent.

By Kathleen Russell

from the October 14, 2009 edition

SAN RAFAEL, CALIF - When a parent harms his or her own child, family courts are supposed to step in and safeguard the victim.

Can you imagine what a tragedy it would be if courts awarded custody to the wrong parent – the abuser?

Actually, according to one conservative estimate, more than 58,000 children per year are ordered by family courts into unsupervised contact with physically or sexually abusive parents following divorce in the United States.

The fact that this type of scandal is taking place in the American justice system defies the imagination. Not since the Roman Catholic Church pedophile scandal has the US seen this level of institutional harm inflicted on innocent children.

Consider the case of Jonea Rogers, a hairstylist from Marin County, Calif. During her costly divorce, she sought help from numerous law enforcement, child protection, and family court authorities to protect her daughter from what medical evidence and reports by the child and her baby sitter suggested could be ongoing neglect or sexual abuse or both by the girl's father or grandfather.

None of the authorities she approached would effectively intervene to protect her daughter. So in 2000, Ms. Rogers eventually felt that she had no choice but to flee with her child to protect her.

More than three years later, this protective mother was caught and jailed for five months, while her daughter was immediately handed over to her alleged abusers. Rogers faced criminal charges for violating a court order by fleeing with her child. After considering the evidence in her case, a jury of her peers completely exonerated her of all wrongdoing.

The very same evidence that exonerated her in the criminal court had been called "frivolous" by the family court judge and disregarded. Despite her acquittal, Rogers was never granted custody of her daughter, who lives with her alleged abusers to this day. She is now forced to pay a fee to visit with her daughter a few times a month in a supervised visitation facility.

As we see in many cases across the country, even when physical or sexual abuse of children is alleged during a divorce, American family courts routinely award custody to the parent with an established record of domestic violence restraining orders, child abuse, neglect, alcoholism, addiction, dangerous mental illness, or a combination.

Meanwhile, the child's other parent, commonly referred to as the "protective parent," is typically demonized by court professionals as an "alienator" for bringing evidence of child abuse to the court's attention.

This happens because the reigning paradigm in family courts across the country is an unscientific, discredited theory known as "Parental Alienation Syndrome," or PAS.

PAS and its many derivatives suggest that the parent who asks the court to protect his or her child by limiting the alleged abuser's access to that child is "alienating" the child from the other parent.

The theory suggests that a parent "coaches" a son or daughter to fabricate false abuse allegations, and the court's attention immediately shifts away from investigating an alleged crime and instead focuses on the "uncooperative parent" who refuses to share custody of the child with the alleged abuser or molester.

PAS is tricky for the courts because parents in heated custody battles often badmouth each other and sometimes exaggerate claims of neglect, and children overhear their parents complaints about each other. Though rare, false allegations of abuse do occur. Research on child sexual abuse indicates that close to 98 percent of children who claim sexual abuse in the context of a high conflict divorce are telling the truth, yet family courts routinely proceed as if the opposite were true.

Protective parents not only lose custody of the children they are trying to protect, but they lose their life savings, too. Many cannot even afford a lawyer to represent their interests, but are saddled with hefty supervised visitation fees and often threatened with a loss of custody if they object to paying the bevy of court-appointed experts that the judge assigns to their case.

Fees quickly add up to tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars. Many such parents go bankrupt, making court appeals impossible. The family law "machine" operates as Big Business, and a sophisticated cottage industry has sprung up that appears to be preying on desperate parents and children who are trying to escape family violence.

Four factors conspire against protective parents:

1. Family law judges are granted broad discretion in their decisionmaking;

2. Juries are nonexistent in most family law courtrooms;

3. Costly appeals are out of reach for most litigants; and

4. Children are not afforded a voice in these important proceedings that determine their future. As a result, nothing short of a major overhaul of the family court system will suffice.

Here in California, home to some of the most egregious cases, the Center for Judicial Excellence and its partner organizations in the Safe Child Coalition recently worked with State Sen. Mark Leno (D) of San Francisco to unanimously pass an audit request through the California legislature to address this growing problem.

The request asks the state auditor to investigate the procedures used by family courts to appoint, train, evaluate, and discipline the plethora of professionals they use in cases in Marin and Sacramento counties.

The legislature should also pass two sensible bills in 2010. Assemblyman Jim Beall (D) of San Jose has proposed a bill that would outlaw PAS in state family courts, and a bill by Assemblywoman Fiona Ma (D) of San Francisco would allow children to have a voice in family court proceedings.

Other states must open their eyes to this problem. Family courts are being manipulated in ways that tragically undermine their mission.

We must ensure access to justice for all who find themselves in our nation's family courts. There are at least 58,000 reasons to get serious about reform today.

Kathleen Russell is a cofounder and staff consultant to the Center for Judicial Excellence in Marin County, Calif.

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Punish the Children if They Refuse to Go With the Abuser?

Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] Battered Mothers Rights - A Human Rights Issue.

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RightsForMothers.com

October 14, 2009

Punish the Children if They Refuse to Go With the Abuser?

Filed under: American Psychological Association, Batterers, Best interest of the child, Child Abuse, Child Custody, Child Custody Battle, Child Custody for mothers, Child Rape, Child custody for fathers, Corrupt Judges, Domestic Abuse, Domestic Violence, Dr. Richard Gardner, Family Court Reform, Family Courts, Family Rights, Getting Screwed by the Whores of the Court, Parental Alienation Syndrome, battered women, parental alienation — justice4mothers @ 6:41 am

claudine

Claudine Dombrowski after another beating by her daughter's father, Hal Richardson

Well, this is very Gardneristic (the pedophile-loving psychologist that invented so-called “parental alienation syndrome”)…punish the children if they won’t go to the dad willingly.  Yes, this is happening.   Could you see Claudine Dombrowski (pictured to the left) telling her daughter it is her desire to that she sees and loves her father (the father that produced the injuries in the picture, who eventually caused her to be 100% disabled)?  (I don’t think anyone could lie that well.)  Instead, her daughter’s father keeps her from seeing her mother.

The American Psychological Association is living in La La Land, or doing some serious drugs, if they believe that children in joint custody have fewer behavior issues if one of those parents abuses the other parent.  But what is more common is for abusers to get custody, like in Claudine Dombrowski’s case…..yes, they may start off with joint custody, under the “friendly parent” sharade, but they quickly work towards securing sole custody away from their victims. This is “domestic violence by proxy.”

So send the children off to the abuser, even though they beg and cry not to go.  Even though they tell you they are getting “bad touches” or being violated in some way.  Even if your children are being raped.  Off they go or you will be punished.  No matter what the children will think of you for making them go.   When will these organizations that represent Whores of the Courtrealize that children are harmed far more by being forced to be with an abuser or rapist than forcing them to love mommy and daddy, no matter what?  Shouldn’t it make sense to these people that the relationship the parent had before the breakup (or didn’t have) should mean something, instead of forcing something down the children’s throats?

Judge Tells Mom: Punish Kids For Skipping Visits With Dad

by Melissa Kossler Dutton

Oct 1st 2009 4:08PM

Australian kids who want to skip visits with dad may find themselves without video games, television or other favorite pastimes.

A judge has ordered a mother to deny her children privileges until they comply with a court order requiring them to spend time with their father.The judge said noncustodial parents need to “positively encourage” visitation and start “removing privileges if the child was defiant,” according to an article in The Australian.

The father asked the court to intervene when his children chose to walk home to their mother’s house rather than meet him for a scheduled after-school visit. The 43-year-old dad later received a call from his ex who told him the boys, aged 11 and 12, “did not wish to go with them,” according to the article.

The problem is “very prevalent” among American fathers as well, Mitchell K. Karpf, chair of the American Bar Association’s Family Law section, told ParentDish.

Judges here have the power to enact similar rulings after a divorce, he said.

“Mom does have an obligation to say you’re going to see your dad and if you don’t you’re grounded,” said Karpf, who practices in Florida.

Judges also can take parents to task for badmouthing former spouses or preventing visitation.

A Florida court once ordered a mother to tell her children that it was “her desire” that they see and love their father, Karpf said. Encouraging children to maintain relationships with both parents makes sense, according to the American Psychological Association. Children in joint custody arrangements have fewer behavior issues, do better in school and have higher self esteem, according to a 2002 study published in the Journal of Family Psychology.

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Shine the Light on Domestic Violence campaign kicked off in New York

Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] Mothers Justice- Initiative Project.

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http://thegovmonitor.com/world_news/united_states/shine-the-light-on-domestic-violence-campaign-kicked-off-in-new-york-10185.html

 

Source: Governor of New York Posted on: 14th October 2009

 

Governor Paterson Observes Domestic Violence Awareness Month, joins Manhattan Borough President Stringer to Kick off “Shine the Light on Domestic Violence” Campaign with Lighting Ceremony at the Empire State Building.

Governor David A. Paterson today observed Domestic Violence Awareness Month in New York by kicking off the “Shine the Light on Domestic Violence” campaign. He was joined by Manhattan Borough President Scott M. Stringer, Executive Director of the Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence (OPDV) Amy Barasch, Senator Ruth Hassell-Thompson and Assemblywoman Helene Weinstein at a lighting ceremony at the Empire State Building. The tower lights will shine purple to symbolize the courage of domestic violence survivors and raise awareness about the prevalence and harm of domestic violence.

“We have made great strides in our work to end abuse. However, with more than 400,000 domestic incidents reported to New York State law enforcement last year – and research indicating that the actual number of incidents could be twice that – there is more progress to be made,” Governor Paterson said. “We know that abuse needs darkness to thrive. That is why we shine the light on domestic violence and stand united in the fight against it. We must continue to raise awareness, pass the legislation that better protects victims, hold offenders accountable and make education a central part of prevention.”

Manhattan Borough President Scott M. Stringer said: “This is an opportunity to send a message to the thousands of families in our city living under a cloud of domestic violence. For too long, this epidemic has hidden under shadows and behind closed doors. I applaud Governor Paterson and the Empire State Building for teaming up to meet the challenge of Domestic Violence Awareness Month with Empire State proportions. Tonight we turn the largest beacon in our city into a shining light for every home affected by violence.”

Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence Executive Director Amy Barasch said: “The purple lights across New York City and the entire State serve to bring domestic violence out of the darkness, and show victims and survivors that we all acknowledge what they’ve experienced and are dedicated to working together to make sure the future will be brighter. For all New Yorkers, it’s a call to act. Each of us – citizens, businesses, co-workers, family and friends – can do something to help put an end to domestic violence.”

“Shine the Light on Domestic Violence” is an OPDV campaign and part of New York’s observance of Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Landmarks across the State will turn purple to symbolize the courage of domestic violence survivors and raise awareness about the prevalence and harm of domestic violence. Among the participating landmarks are: Niagara Falls; Peace Bridge in Erie County; the Mid-Hudson Bridge in Dutchess County; the Hutchinson Metro Center; the Intrepid Sea Air & Space Museum; the Con Edison Clock Tower in Manhattan; 7 World Trade Center; the Virgin Records sign in Times Square; 601 Lexington Avenue; JC Penney at the Manhattan Mall; the Bronx Supreme Court; the Bronx County Building; and Brooklyn Borough Hall.

Today’s observance is part of Governor Paterson’s ongoing advocacy for domestic violence prevention. As Lieutenant Governor, he led the passage of legislation that prohibits law enforcement agencies from charging victims for serving orders of protection, strengthens penalties against human trafficking and allows victims of domestic violence to terminate their residential lease if remaining in their home would jeopardize the victims’ safety. Shortly after becoming Governor, he signed the Family Court Access Law to expand the definition of family/household member to include victims who are or have been in an intimate relationship, regardless of whether they have lived with the abuser or whether the relationship is of a sexual nature.

This year, the Governor introduced and signed a domestic violence program bill. The law requires education and training for court appointed attorneys for children and requires courts to state on the record how domestic violence factored into their custody and visitation determinations. The law protects victims of sexual assault by establishing sex crimes as “family offenses” and requires law enforcement officers who respond to a domestic incident involving an individual on probation or parole to send a copy of the incident report to the supervising agency as soon as possible.

OPDV supports two statewide victims’ hotlines – one in English and another in Spanish. When all local domestic violence hotlines across the State are factored in, there were more than 300,000 calls from individuals seeking help. Fifty percent of adult female homicide victims in New York in 2008 were killed by their intimate partners, while four percent of adult male homicide victims were killed by their intimate partners.

Deputy Secretary for Public Safety Denise E. O’Donnell said: “In New York, violence by an intimate partner is the leading cause of homicides for women 16 and older. Women are most at risk in their own homes, the very place they should be safe and secure. By bathing landmarks like the Empire State Building in purple light, we ask everyone to join in the fight to end domestic violence and the terrible toll it takes on New Yorkers.”

Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of to Combat Domestic Violence Yolanda Jimenez said: “The Bloomberg administration remains committed to eradicating domestic violence and while the purple lights remind us that domestic violence remains pervasive, there is encouraging news in New York City: we have seen a 24 percent decrease in family-related crimes and an eight percent drop in family-related homicides. There is more to be done and working together we can make violence against women, children and families a thing of the past.”

Senator Ruth Hassell-Thompson said: “I am proud to be part of this event to educate and increase public awareness about the dangers of domestic violence. We must be ever vigilant in our efforts to continue this mission throughout the year and not just the month of October. Domestic violence destroys families, lives and communities and until this message is understood by everyone, our mission will never be complete.”

Assemblywoman Helene Weinstein, Chair of the Assembly Judiciary Committee, said: “With a 25 percent rise in intimate partner homicide in New York in 2008, and intimate partner violence being the leading cause of homicides for women, new laws alone are not enough. While the Assembly and I have worked for more than two decades to increase protections for victims of domestic violence, we must continue to work in our communities every day to help end the cycle of violence. This campaign to shine the light on domestic violence will increase public awareness and help our efforts to prevent domestic violence.”

Patti Jo Newell, acting CEO of the New York State Coalition Against Domestic Violence, said: “The New York State Coalition Against Domestic Violence would like to thank the owners of the Empire State Building for their vision in the Lighting Partners Program and for shining the world famous tower lights on both the problem of domestic violence and the strength of public-private partnership to end it. We’d also like to thank the Governor and the Manhattan Borough President for their commitment to a strong public response to domestic violence. We’re pleased to collaborate with the NYS Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence and domestic violence programs across the great State of New York to ‘turn the state purple,’ bringing awareness to communities and signaling hope and encouragement to survivors of domestic violence.”

To see all 85 participating organizations throughout the State, please visit: http://opdv.state.ny.us/public_awareness/purpleorgs.html.

Topics: abuse, domestic violence, domestic violence survivors, Governance, New York,Shine the Light on Domestic Violence, society

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