Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Florida Domestic Violence Defenses: Did Not Happen

The most common variant of a defense that a domestic violence allegation did not happen is precisely that: nothing illegal happened.

This is a very clear defense in its purest form - the two elements of battery, intentional touching or striking that was harmful or offensive, simply did not occur. Either there was a mistake or someone lied or both.

However, many cases are not so simple. As discussed in the video below, parts of the allegations may be admitted while others are denied. Some cases are felonies, some defenses may affect other defenses or even eliminate them.

One thing is very consistent: Many are being pushed into "counseling" classes that may last for over six (6) months when they never broke the law. Worse, these classes are a prime example of the 80/20 Rule: they will help 20% of the participants and will fail 80% of the time.

You read that right - domestic violence classes have a failure rate that often exceeds 80%.

Why? Two reasons.

1) Many of the class participants should not even be there in the first place. They foolishly tried to handle the case on their own, and found themselves imprisoned in worthless rehabilitation classes for "domestic abusers" when they never committed any act of domestic violence. Of course, they are blamed for their reluctance to admit to abuse that never occurred.

2) As I have pointed out repeatedly in other posts, such as here, an accurate diagnosis is required in order for treatment to be effective. Where the diagnostic model consists of "what's your charge?" followed by the conclusion "You need domestic violence counseling!", we have a problem. Treatment is only as effective as the diagnosis. Yet Florida has the usual, feel good, one size fits all approach. Thus if a woman or a man commits an act of domestic violence and really need treatment, they get a political solution to a medical problem.

Finally, not to harp on the oft stated and blisteringly obvious, but a large part of the problem is Florida's "somebody is going to jail when the police are called on a domestic" law (determination of the "primary aggressor" by statutory requirement). As a result, mistakes are made in the field, and people are going to jail for crimes they did not commit. Yelling during an argument is turned into an assault by the legal process, despite the fact no actual assault occurred. In the same manner, snatching the keys to your own vehicle becomes a battery. When neither an assault nor a battery occurred.


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