indianz.com Dynamic Homes
Advertise on Indianz.Com
Home Whats New on Indianz.Com? News Forums
  About
Home > News > Headlines
Print   Subscribe
Steve Russell: Family violence docket an ugly one
Friday, June 27, 2008
Filed Under: Opinion

"Having grown up in rural Oklahoma, I knew family violence was a problem, but I have to admit I was ignorant of the size of the problem. It first hit me when I was the administrative judge on the municipal court and I noticed that more than half of the assault cases were dismissed - a waste of limited resources that set me to an investigation.

It turned out that stranger assaults were likely to go to trial. The statistics were caused by wholesale dismissal of wife-beating cases. I use this language, ''wife-beating,'' to avoid the error of gender neutrality in discussing family violence. Yes, women are just as likely as men to resort to force in an argument. However, the bodies in the morgues and emergency rooms are more than 90 percent female.

Men bite dogs, but that does not make dog bites a species-neutral problem.

Women hit men, but that does not make family violence a sex-neutral problem.

Speaking rationally, men are the perpetrators and women are the victims; and then there are a few special cases, like the fellow who took off his shirt in the courtroom and showed me the perfect outline of a steam iron branded into his chest and the guy who showed me a photo of the bite marks on his testicles so I would understand why he punched her.

I stack those two cases among the thousands I heard in my career. Then there was the guy who smashed his wife's fish tank, the guy who tossed her kitten out a fifth-floor window, the guy who shot her dog, or the guy who did something unspeakable to her horse. The family violence docket is plenty ugly, and you never know how close you are to homicide. It happened, in fact, that I once signed a protective order for a woman who was already dead; and I am acutely aware that paper cannot stop bullets."

Get the Story:
Steve Russell: Fighting violence with law is not always a safe bet (Indian Country Today 6/27)

Related Stories:
Steve Russell: The Indian view on climate change (5/30)
Steve Russell: Odds and ends and current events (4/21)
Steve Russell: Addressing ethnic frauds (4/4)
Steve Russell: Struggles in an Indian education (3/14)
Steve Russell: Cherokee Nation and assimilation (2/29)
Steve Russell: Cherokee Nation breaks its word (2/8)
Steve Russell: Indian voters a voice for change (2/1)
Steve Russell: The Indian law Hall of Shame (1/11)
Steve Russell: Social capital in Indian Country (12/28)
Steve Russell: Cherokee constitutional crisis (12/14)
Steve Russell: The price of 'sovereignty' (11/23)
Steve Russell: Getting along in Indian Country (11/9)
Steve Russell: Life lessons from a poker game (10/26)



Copyright © Indianz.Com
More headlines...
Feature Story:
Menominee Nation off-reservation casino rejected (1/8)
Feature Story:
Ken Salazar picked to lead Interior Department (1/8)
Indianz.Com Casino Stalker (1/8)
Federal Recognition Database 2.0 (1/8)
In The Hoop Column (1/8)
Indian Gaming News (1/8)
The Federal Register (1/8)
NCAI PDF: Draft agenda for tribal leaders meeting (1/8)
Some Cherokee councilors cancel inauguration trip (1/8)
High school band to stay 'Chiefs' for inaugural (1/8)
Jodi Rave: Series on Indian lawmakers in Montana (1/8)
Senate panel holds Daschle confirmation hearing (1/8)
Rep. Cole gains seat on Appropriations panel (1/8)
Colville man selected as BIA superintendent (1/8)
Puyallup Tribe affected by flooding in Washington (1/8)
EPA issues boil water order for Omaha Reservation (1/8)
NPR: Alaska Native corporations seek friends (1/8)
Lawmakers angry over Oneida Nation trust transfer (1/8)
Quechan man's death still being investigated (1/8)
Editorial: Sam Bradford a Cherokee class act (1/8)
Pala Band seeks to reclaim ancestral homeland (1/8)
Recorder: Morongo Band argues attorney conflict (1/8)
Treatment program focuses on Arapaho culture (1/8)
Former Cheyenne-Arapaho official sentenced (1/8)
U.S. Attorney to seek state office in Colorado (1/8)
Seneca Nation hopeful for casino under Obama (1/8)
Red Lake Nation breaks ground on casino expansion (1/8)
Auburn Community to resume casino expansion (1/8)
Shingle Springs casino sees 19K visitors a day (1/8)
Mohegan Tribe reaches deal over casino smoking (1/8)
more headlines...
A D V E R T I S E M E N T
AllNative.Com Home Decor

Home | Abramoff | Arts & Entertainment | Business | Canada | Cobell | Education | Environment | Forum | Health | Humor | Indian Gaming | Jobs | Law | National | News | Opinion | Politics | Recognition | Red Lake | Sports | Trust

Suggest a Site

Indianz.Com Terms of Service | Indianz.Com Privacy Policy
About Indianz.Com | Contribute to Indianz.Com | Advertise on Indianz.Com | Write to Indianz.Com

Indianz.Com is a product of Noble Savage Media, LLC and Ho-Chunk, Inc.