(Columbia) April 26, 2005 - A new criminal domestic
violence bill is expected to be introduced in a House
subcommittee on Tuesday afternoon. Judiciary
Committee Chairman Jim Harrison of Columbia says the
bill is expected to be approved. Harrison says he also
expects the full committee will approve it
Wednesday.
Harrison says Charleston Representative John Graham
Altman is one of the sponsors. Altman received national
attention last week for what he said after an earlier
domestic violence bill was killed. He
told WIS he didn't understand why women go back
to men who abuse them.
Domestic violence advocates say the new
bill looks a lot like the bill they introduced to
the full committee, the one that was tabled.
The new bill includes training for judges, and at
first glance, advocates say one of the penalties is
stiffer than what was originally asked for. The original
bill required third time offenders to serve a mandatory
minimum of 120 days behind bars. In the new version, a
third offence would be a felony, punishable by a minimum
of a year in jail.
The new bill would also set fines of up to $2500 for
first-offense criminal domestic violence. The current
penalty is 30 days in jail or a $500 fine.
The bill's co-sponsor, Gilda Cobb-Hunter
(D-Orangeburg) says, "What they have offered and put on
the table is making the third offence a felony, which I
support. ... I didn't think I could get that much.
That's why I didn't include it in my original version.
But I'm saying, hey you guys, go for it."
One thing Cobb-Hunter and advocates are still sorting
through is a section dealing with pretrial intervention.
The way the original bill was written, pre-trial
intervention is not an option for batterers.
Under the new bill, first offenders would still
attend pre-trial intervention, but the program would be
26 weeks instead of around six, and would require
offenders to attend batterer intervention programs,
previously not required.
The bill also makes another big change. In the past,
a first-time offender's record would be expunged after
three years. In the new bill, that's bumped up to five
years all in all.
Cobb-Hunter says those are minor changes that
many lawmakers were quick to label as flawed, "I am so
offended, so offended, on so many levels for so many
people who spent so much time on this. I can't let that
go unchallenged. I just can't do that."
Advocates say they have never seen so much compliance
with what we've been asking for. Rep. Cobb-Hunter told
WIS Monday evening that it appears that they have
reached a version that they can live with.
Reported by Kara
Gormley
Updated 8:55am by Chantelle
Janelle