Sunday, November 15, 2009

GPS Monitoring

The Louisville Courier Journal today has a number of stories on fighting domestic violence in the state. Here is the lead story by Andrew Wolfson. Other stories today linked from that lead story:

# Graphic: How GPS monitoring works
# Efforts to extend protection to daters stall in legislature
# Protective order didn’t stop man from shooting girlfriend, mother
# 12 states use GPS monitoring
# Domestic-violence slayings in Kentucky
# The proposed GPS monitoring law
# Slain abuse victims who had protective orders
# EPO vs. DVO: What’s the difference?
# Fighting domestic violence: What you can do
Indiana, as of July 1, 2009, is one of the states that allows GPS monitoring.* See the LCJ graphic on how GPS monitoring works.

Thursday, November 12, 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 7, 2009

Honoring Lives Lost in the Past Year to Domestic Violence

From WTHR:

Ceremony honors victims of domestic violence, unveils new project


Indianapolis - Survivors gathered Tuesday to celebrate and honor the lives of those lost to domestic violence.

The Commemorative and Survivor Celebration was held at Tabernacle Presbyterian Church at 34th and Central Avenue Tuesday morning. It is an annual event to remember lives lost and raise awareness.

The names of Hoosier victims were read as candles were lit in their honor. But in its 19th year, the tone of the ceremony was even more serious as the number of domestic violence deaths have increased dramatically - in some part due to the recession.

According to the Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence, 49 people have died from July 2008 to July 2009, 21 of whom are from central Indiana alone. Just three months ago downtown, advocacy groups held a Rally called "Enough is Enough" following the consecutive murders of three women.

"This year was frightening. It was frightening. And that's what really drew us to the Enough is Enough. Every month, there was another victim," said Julie Marsh, Domestic Violence Network. "It does take everybody to start talking about the solutions."

A friend of April Wills spoke at the ceremony. Last year, Wills' estranged husband kidnapped her, led police on a chase through Indianapolis, and killed her in the car in front of their 13-year-old daughter before shooting himself. Her surviving friend shared her powerful story.

A new project was unveiled this year. It's called Power of Images, and consists of several banners, each one showcasing a Hoosier killed by domestic abuse. The idea is to have the banners travel around the community to be displayed in the lobbies of businesses, or at public venues, to humanize the problem and raise awareness.

"These are human faces and real people and the words that are on each of the banners are quotes from the family members. So we didn't make anything up on these banners. Everything is real," said Marsh.

Wills wrote a poem after she suffered an abusive episode, and her powerful words will be on her banner.

The number 211 will also be displayed, informing today's victims how they can start getting help.

You can also help by donating. Because of the recession, many victims are not leaving perpetrators because they fear they can't get jobs to support themselves, or they will lose health insurance for their children.

Learn more about the national movement to stop domestic violence and remember lives lost.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Past Child Molestor Now Accused of Battering Daughter

From WIBC.com:

By Eric Berman
9/4/2009

An Indianapolis man locked up as a 12-year-old for molesting a three-year-old girl in 2001 is now charged with physically abusing his own infant daughter.

David Likens was the youngest of three brothers charged with sexually abusing a girl their mother was supposed to be baby-sitting. He's now accused of yanking his eight-month-old daughter by the legs hard enough to break her shinbone.

Marion County prosecutors say the baby had numerous broken bones in her legs and arms.

The baby's mother, Dina Williams, faces lesser charges of neglect and recklessness. Court records say she told police Likens would swing the baby by her arms and legs, but "doesn't know his own strength."

But a woman who stayed with the couple for a while claims Likens yanked the girl by the legs and slammed her down on a bed when she wouldn't stop crying.

Marion County Prosecutor Carl Brizzi says investigators are still piecing together what happened, but says Williams initially told police the baby had fallen out of bed. Doctors say the injuries are consistent with blunt-force injury, not a fall.

Likens was one of three brothers charged with taking turns molesting a three-year-old girl in 2001. Wayne Likens, then 17, is serving a 20-year prison term. Their mother has completed a prison sentence for neglect. A middle brother was sentenced as a juvenile.

Brizzi says David Likens' juvenile record will be a factor.

"The judge can take that into consideration, and in terms of how we're going to deal with this -- this is not this person's first brush with the criminal justice system," Brizzi says.

Likens could face six to 20 years if convicted of battery. Williams faces up to nine years.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Indiana University to Help Law Enforcement and Medical Community Tackle Sexual Assaults

From The Muncie Star:

UPDATED: Law enforcement, medical community to tackle sexual assaults
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS • August 30, 2009


BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Nurses and police officers will get training in how to respond to sexual assault cases and a special prosecutor will focus solely on sex crimes under a new program in Monroe County.

Prosecutor Chris Gaal says the Sexual Assault Response Team is designed to improve evidence collection and preservation and increase awareness of sexual assault.

Indiana University will play a key role, with education campaigns designed to inform students of the link between alcohol use and sexual assault.

The united effort is welcomed by Toby Strout of Middle Way House, a domestic violence and rape crisis center.

Strout said the center helped 73 sexual violence victims in 2008 and had already counseled that number as of July 31 this year.

“2009 is stacking up as a year of need,” Strout said.

Mary Hoskins, with Bloomington Hospital, said 12 nurses have volunteered for the training, and two have already completed it.

“It has been life-altering for them,” Hoskins said. “They did not understand the depth” of the issue until they completed the training.

Fourteen police detectives have signed up for a Sept. 22 training session.

Bloomington Police Department Capt. Joe Qualters said task force members will work to put together strong cases against those who commit sexual assaults.His department has received an average of 70 reports of sexual assaults each of the last three years, he said.

“And that’s only the reported cases,” he said. “That’s too many.”

Gaal said federal stimulus money will pay for the prosecutor for two years. Grants will fund the nurse examiner program.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Stop Violence Against Women of the World

From Letters to the Editor, Indianapolis Star:

Our View: Stop violence against women of world

By Pierre Atlas & Esta Stoler
Posted: August 25, 2009


A girl of 9 is forced to marry a much older man. A young teen is burned with acid while walking to school. A teenager is sentenced to death by stoning for the "crime" of having been raped. A woman is publicly lashed for wearing trousers. A victim of brutal domestic violence must flee her village -- and then her country -- when her husband, a high-ranking military officer, threatens to kill her.

The United Nations Development Fund for Women reports that one out of every three women worldwide will be physically, sexually or in another way abused in her lifetime. According to the World Health Organization, this kind of violence affects 70 percent of women and girls in some countries. It takes many forms, from domestic violence and sexual assault, to rape as a weapon of war, to forcing women to trade sex for food, to human trafficking, to forced marriage, stonings and so-called honor killings. Some victims are young children; others are grandmothers.

Nearly all of us recognize that violence against women and girls is a deep and fundamental violation of basic human rights. But what can we do? There is something that would make a difference -- the International Violence Against Women Act. If passed by Congress, the act would, for the first time, make stopping violence against women and girls a priority in American diplomacy and foreign aid. Enactment would be a historic step in addressing violence against women globally.

This bipartisan legislation was first introduced in the 110th Congress by Indiana's Republican Sen. Richard Lugar, along with then-Democratic senator and current Vice President Joe Biden. It will be reintroduced in Congress this fall. The legislation builds on the successful domestic Violence Against Women Act, which helped create the shelters, rape crisis programs and other services that Hoosiers have come to count on in their communities.

The act would direct the federal government to create a comprehensive strategy to reduce violence around the world where it is most severe. It would authorize funds for health programs and services for survivors, and to train foreign law enforcement to take violence against women and girls seriously. Its funds would help improve the U.S. response to violence against women in wars and conflicts as well as after natural disasters. The act would help build capacity for the overseas women's organizations that are working in communities to stop this horrific violence. Equally important, it would support prevention programs designed to change attitudes about women and girls. It would do around the world what we have done here at home -- increase public awareness to change attitudes so that fewer people condone this violence.

A new poll to be released this fall will show that nearly nine out of 10 Americans say addressing global violence against women and girls should be a U.S. foreign policy priority. Passage of the International Violence Against Women Act would be a critical first step.

Hoosiers can be proud that our legislators in Washington have played key roles in advancing this bill. Not only is Sen. Lugar a leader on the issue, but so is Rep. Dan Burton, who has spoken out powerfully about it. Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh supports the bill as well. The House and Senate should make passage of this important and potentially life-saving, bipartisan legislation a priority so that President Barack Obama can sign it this year.



Atlas directs The Richard G. Lugar Franciscan Center for Global Studies at Marian University. Soler is president of the Family Violence Prevention Fund in San Francisco.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Thanks to the Indiana Pacers, Shelter Adds Play Space for Kids

From the Evansville courierpress.com:

What used to be bare lawn is now a colorful playground at the Albion Fellows Bacon Center for victims of domestic and sexual violence.

The yard at the shelter for women and children in Evansville was never fancy — just green lawn inside a nondescript privacy fence — but it was graced with the cooling, peaceful shade of a large hardwood tree. However, the loss of that tree in a storm last year left the yard with only a picnic table and no shelter from the sun.

That changed recently with the receipt of a $4,694 "two-for-two" grant from the Indiana Pacers Foundation and Verizon Wireless. The communications company pledged to contribute $2 for every two-point field goal the Pacers made during the 2007-2008 season. The Albion Fellows Bacon Center applied for and received a grant to transform its yard into a more hospitable space.

"The backyard used to just be a plain, grassy lawn. On a day when it is 95 degrees, there is not a woman who is going to sit out there without shade," said Jenny Ballard, assistant director. The center used the money to purchase three new saplings of a variety of maple that is expected to grow into shade trees within a few years. More tables and a small shed also were added. The main additions, however, were a swing set and a large piece of play equipment set in soft playground mulch. The changes provide a secure place for children to play and their mothers to watch them outside the confines of the shelter's walls.

An average of about 25 women and children a month stay at the shelter. Women and minor children may stay there up to 45 days. In addition, the shelter operates a 24-hour domestic violence and sexual assault hot line, support groups, crisis intervention counseling, advocacy and help referrals.

ABA Domestic Violence Pro Bono Directory Up and Running

Go to the site for possible help with domestic violence issues free of charge from ABA attorneys volunteering their time to help DV victims.

Pro Bono Net

Just click on Indiana (or whatever state you need help in) and see what is available for help.