Expert talks to city police, women’s group
By Kourtney McCarty
The Journal Gazette - FortWayne.com
For a domestic violence task force to be successful, it must be an advocate for the victim, a domestic violence expert told local police Thursday.
Such a task force should take the pressure off the victim as the primary source for providing evidence against abusers, as well as provide services for the victim’s immediate needs, including those of any children involved, said Mike McCarty, founder of the Public Training Institute.
McCarty spoke at the Fort Wayne Police Department on Thursday morning and later at the Circle of Women Luncheon at the YWCA on Wells Street.
Fort Wayne police recently formed a domestic violence team of three investigators, one victim assistance advocate and one supervisor.
McCarty, a former police officer, began his law enforcement career in Nashville, Tenn., where he helped form a unit to combat Nashville’s high rate of domestic violence deaths. The unit’s work was hailed as a model program by former President Clinton.
McCarty explained to a group of officers, investigators and advocates at the police department how important it is to establish trust with victims. The best way to do that is by ensuring their cases will be handled thoroughly.
They’ll be more willing to report future violent encounters, McCarty said.
Also, in domestic violence cases, the victim is generally afraid to testify against the offender for fear of retribution. For that reason, police officers should document everything and collect as much evidence as they can, McCarty said.
Fort Wayne’s new domestic violence team will implement this strategy, Capt. Paul Shrawder said. Detailed documentation will not only hold up better in court, he said, but it will also take the pressure off relying on the victim’s testimony.
“We are going to take the steps out that we force the victim to do and do it for them,” Shrawder said.
For example, victims’ advocates will accompany police officers to crime scenes so that the victims can quickly receive the help they need.
Victims’ advocates will also be able to help those usually considered the secondary victims: children. According to McCarty, 80 percent of children who witness abuse between caregivers will grow up to be abusers or be in abusive relationships.
Reaching children is the key to breaking the cycle of violence. Even if the child is never physically abused, that child sees abusive behavior as normal.
“The kids don’t realize that everybody doesn’t live like this,” McCarty said. “These violent homes are breeding grounds for future criminals.”
More than 630 women attended the eighth-annual Circle of Women luncheon Thursday when McCarty emphasized that point. The Circle of Women raises money for programs targeting domestic abuse victims such as the Self-Sufficiency Center and the Women’s Shelter.
By creating awareness and implementing the domestic violence team, the Fort Wayne community is heading in the right direction, McCarty said.