Terri Hamrick, MNM
Executive Director
Survivors, Inc.
Post Office Box 3572
Gettysburg, PA 17325
(717) 334-0589 Extension 22
Facsimile (717) 334-3576
EMail: Terri@...
Mission Statement
Survivors supports those who experience domestic violence or sexual assault and
strives to create a world in which violence against women and children is
unthinkable.
From: Women's eNews
[mailto:womensenewstoday@...]
Sent: Friday, June 13, 2008 11:31 AM
To: Terri@...
Subject: Batterers Shoot Holes in Protective Gun Bans
|
Landmark laws passed in the 1990s aimed at keeping guns from abusers have
fallen short of their mark, say law enforcement personnel and advocates.
Marie Tessier reports our latest story in our "Dangerous Trends,
Innovative Responses" series. Story follows announcements. Please Donate Now. http://www.womensenews.org/support.cfm. Okay. We accept
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free subscription today at www.womensenews.org/join.cfm. Here's today's update: SAFETY
Batterers Shoot Holes in Protective Gun
Bans
By Marie Tessier
Her estranged husband, Karl Vance--scheduled to go to trial on charges of
misdemeanor domestic violence assault--was subject to a protection order.
When a municipal court judge in early 2007 issued the protective order, he
ordered Vance to turn over firearms to the King County Sheriff's Department. Using model procedures, the judge notified Vance that he was barred under
state and federal laws from possessing guns and risked a felony violation of
federal gun laws, among other crimes. A federal conviction could carry as
much as a 10-year sentence in prison. Karl Vance turned over a firearm. It was an air pistol, according to news
reports. But two months later, in April 2007, witnesses say they heard shots fired
inside an apartment building in Des Moines, Wash., and then saw Monique Vance
fleeing barefoot, screaming, "He's trying to kill me," according to
Karl Vance's court indictment. Then, witnesses told investigators, Karl Vance followed his wife outside
in plain view, and shot her with a .357-caliber handgun, according to court
documents. Monique Vance died on a doorstep with multiple bullet wounds in her torso.
She was declared dead at the scene, court records say. Karl Vance has pleaded
not guilty to a murder charge and is scheduled to go on trial later this
year. Guns Stayed in Abusers' Hands
Whatever the verdict in this case, the allegations seem all too familiar
to advocates for battered women and law enforcement officials. Fourteen years
after the Violence Against Women Act was passed in 1994, they say achieving a
national vision of disarming domestic-violence offenders has proven elusive
in most parts of the country. "It seems like a great idea, to take guns away from batterers,"
says Merril Cousin, executive director of the King County Coalition Against
Domestic Violence in Seattle. "It's more complicated than it sounds,
because it depends on finding out that a firearm is involved, it often
requires a court order, and then you have to get the order enforced." Guns are used to kill most victims of intimate partner homicides, though
the proportion has been falling, according to the Bureau of Justice
Statistics. In recent years, about 1,200 women have died annually in intimate partner
homicides, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. About a third of
female homicide victims in the United States are killed by a partner or
former partner. Women ages 25 to 49 are at higher risk, as are African
American women and Native American women. In the Vance case, prosecutors say it is not clear exactly how Karl Vance
obtained the handgun that they allege led to his wife's death. It is clear,
however, that he did not own it, a spokesperson for the King County
prosecutor said. 283 Million Guns
There are 283 million privately owned guns in the United States, according
to the anti-gun Violence Policy Center in Washington, D.C. Licensed firearm
dealers sell more than 4 million guns each year, and up to 2 million more are
sold through other venues. Some sales are unregulated. Background checks that went into effect in 1994 are not required for all
sales, and illegal gun sales are thriving, according to the Brady Campaign to
Prevent Gun Violence in Washington, D.C. Under federal gun laws passed in the 1990s, people convicted of
misdemeanor crimes of domestic violence and people subject to domestic
violence protective orders were banned from possessing firearms. That was a switch from an earlier era, when prohibitions were only placed
on convicted felons that left many batterers--typically pleaded down and
convicted on misdemeanor charges--still legally armed. In the years since the breakthrough laws took effect, the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System, or NICS, has prevented thousands of gun
sales, though the records remain incomplete. In 2006 alone, nearly 10,000
firearms sales were halted because a gun buyer had a domestic violence
misdemeanor conviction or was subject to a protective order, according to
data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Another 8,000 firearms transfers or permits were denied by state agencies
conducting background checks for concealed weapons, hunting permits or other
purposes, mostly using NICS data. Few Prosecutions for Violators
But only eight offenders were prosecuted in federal courts for possessing
a firearm after a domestic violence conviction in 2006, data from the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms indicate. That year, only 28 people
nationwide were charged with falsifying information on the background check
for any reason. To hold batterers accountable, at least nine states have passed mandatory
gun bans when a protection order is issued, similar to the federal ban, so
that investigators and prosecutors have an easier time coordinating victim
safety. At least as many states give judges the discretion to prohibit
firearms, says Emily Sack, a professor of criminal law at Roger Williams
University in Bristol, R.I. New Jersey law gives police much broader authority to find and remove
weapons by requiring that a search warrant be issued with protective orders,
Sack says. In Arizona, police have a detailed mechanism to seize weapons and
to hold them if there is reasonable cause to believe that returning the
firearms would endanger anyone in the home. "We want to disarm the batterer before the violence escalates to the
level of a felony," says Mark Hanna of the King County Firearms
Forfeiture Program in Seattle, a sheriff's department agency that works with
law enforcement and specialized domestic violence courts. "It is
critical to victim safety that we make the misdemeanors matter." Ed Googins, police chief in South Portland, Maine, says officers in his
department do not depend on specific firearms laws. "We look for
opportunities to make people safe," Googins says. "Sometimes we can
do that simply by asking a victim if we can take the gun for
safekeeping." The South Portland police also say it takes every opportunity to seize
weapons as evidence of a crime. "We follow up on defendants 24 or 48
hours after a call, and that's when we find violations of bail conditions or
protection orders, so we can take a firearm into evidence, and that's about a
third of the time," Googins says. "It's really a matter of using
the laws we have available and using them to our advantage to make things
safer for the victim." Marie Tessier is an independent journalist who writes
frequently about violence against women and legal affairs. Women's eNews welcomes your comments. E-mail us at editors@....
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(WOMENSENEWS)--Early last
year, Monique Vance appeared to be a case study in Washington state law
enforcement managing to keep women safe.


