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New California Law Grants Protection for Domestic Violence Survivors

By Leland Yee, Ph.D.
Assistant President pro Tem
California State Senate
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger today signed into law a bill I authored that victim advocates believe will result in more women coming forward to law enforcement after falling victim to domestic violence. Senate Bill 1356, a commonsense and much-needed law, protects domestic violence survivors from the threat of incarceration when they refuse to testify against their abuser in court. The law mirrors an existing statute for sexual assault victims.
Domestic violence survivors have been through enough; the last thing they need is to be re-victimized by our legal system or be exposed to threats of incarceration. This law is not going to result in fewer prosecutions, but instead just the opposite. Survivors are more likely to report incidents of domestic violence when they trust law enforcement and our system of justice.
In fact, in a letter regarding another bill before the Legislature in 1991, then Los Angeles District Attorney Ira Reiner agreed with victim advocates. The letter from Reiner’s special counsel John Lovell stated, “Prosecutors who raise the spectra of possible incarceration of victim/witnesses diminish the credibility of the criminal justice system as an effective instrument in combating domestic violence. The unintended consequence of those types of warnings is a chilling constraint on victim/witnesses to come forward in these types of cases at all.”
Coercion is a draconian practice that should not be used in getting a victim to testify after just facing a similar control tactic from her abuser. Instead, prosecutors should work with advocates in getting the victim to a place where she is comfortable and willing to testify, which in turn will result in a much more successful prosecution. SB 1356 also rightfully considers the children in domestic violence cases, who will no longer be put at risk of losing both parents and being unfairly pushed into foster care.
Since 1991, sexual assault victims have not faced imprisonment if they decide not to testify in a criminal case, whereas domestic violence victims under a second contempt charge have been subject to incarceration. This law was tested in 2005, when the district attorney in San Mateo County pursued and a judge ordered jail time to a victim for refusing to testify against her abuser. The state appeals court later dissolved the contempt charge due to the fact that the case was already prosecuted and resulted in a guilty verdict without the victim’s testimony.
“I felt that the system had given up on me,” said Katina Britt, the victim in the case. “The district attorney did not protect me, even though I was a victim of a serious bodily injury crime. The DA wanted to victimize me once more and the court willingly obliged. I wish I had the protection sought by Senator Yee’s bill.”
It is improper and unjust to hold the victim personally responsible for winning a guilty verdict against the batterer, and there is no evidence to suggest that forced testimony leads to higher conviction rates. It is unconscionable that survivors of domestic violence have faced such threats and even more disturbing that some have been dealt jail sentences after falling victim to something out of their control.
Fortunately, as result of SB 1356, such practices will no longer be tolerated in our justice system.
Leland Yee is a member of the California State Senate Democratic Leadership team and the Assistant President pro Tem of the Senate.
Comments
Congratulations Senator Yee. Now this is good legislation. Thank you Governor for seeing the good in this.
Of course Assemblymen Todd Spitzer the incarceration king was against this.
Thankfully there are some legislators that are still human and are not beholden to the Law Enforcement Unions that need more and more of our children in prison to feed their growing appetites.
Anyone who is threatened with incarceration after being victimized is not going to come forward. How dense do you have to be to not get it!
Now if our legistlators would turn their attention to prison reform in this state maybe we could actually lower the deficit. You don't need to build more prisons. You need to reform parole and sentencing. Roll back some of these draconian sentences that only serve to create criminals. Young men who are sent to prison for non violent crimes, come out with violent tendencies. They have been subjected to constant threat, violence, intimidation and worse. The public has no idea. The law enforcement unions want your kids in prison. It is called Job Security. They love the 70% recidivism rate and lack of rehabilitation. That would take money out of their pockets if they were rehabilitated and never returned again. Califorians need to take back California. Prison does not rehabilitate in its current condition.
No more soap box. Senator Yee, this was good legislation. Thank you.
I am a Republican, just so ya know. I am also against Runners law and Marsy's law. My Republican legislators need to wake up and stop backing these failed tough on crime, expensive initiatives for the benefit of Law Enforcement Unions.
Posted by: Morris1 at July 2, 2008 07:59 AM
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