HUFFINGTON POST NEW YORK December 1, 2014
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rebecca-iwerks/genderbased-violence-has-_b_6250140.html
Gender-Based Violence Has No Place in New York City By Rebecca Iwerks, Anna Ognibene and Elisabeth Wickeri Jessica could have been your neighbor. She had three children. She balanced working and taking care of them with her husband, Simon. Slowly, Simon began to insert into their relationship a pattern of abuse. He tried to control her; he tried to limit her interactions with others; and he repeatedly threatened to harm the children. Jessica was scared for herself and her girls. When Jessica decided to apply for a restraining order, a judge agreed that Simon was a danger to Jessica and her children, and ordered that Simon stay away from Jessica, the girls, and her home. In violation of the restraining order, Simon came to Jessica’s home and snatched her three girls from the front yard. Jessica immediately and repeatedly called the police. The police told Jessica that she was being ridiculous and the girls were probably fine with their father. Instead of receiving protection from the police department, Jessica’s three girls were found shot to death in the back of their father’s truck. Jessica brought a case against the police department that went all the way up to the U.S.
Supreme Court. In Castle Rock v. Gonzales, 545 U.S. 748 (2005), the Court found that the police were not obligated to protect Jessica and her girls because enforcement of the restraining order was not mandatory and did not create an individual right to due process under the Constitution. In other words, the police officers had the discretion to act the way they did. Though few cases have received such high court attention, Jessica’s underlying story of abuse is not unique. In 2013, the New York City police department responded to an average of 765 domestic incidence reports a day. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that more than one in
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