Controversy
breathes new life into violence bill Criminal domestic violence legislation likely to pass
Legislature this session By RICK
BRUNDRETT Staff
Writer
A criminal domestic violence bill that appeared dead early last
week in the S.C. House will start today on an expected fast track to
passage.
And Rep. John Graham Altman will be one of the revised bill’s
co-sponsors, House Speaker David Wilkins, R-Greenville, and Rep. Jim
Harrison, R-Richland, said Monday afternoon.
Altman, R-Charleston, gained national attention after he uttered
what critics called insensitive remarks during a House Judiciary
Committee hearing and to a WIS TV reporter.
A longtime victim advocate was delighted Monday about the bill’s
change of fortune — and Altman’s apparent change of heart.
“John Graham Altman is the best thing that has ever happened to
us,” said Laura Hudson, spokeswoman for the S.C. Victim Assistance
Network. “I guess there are no permanent friends and no permanent
enemies. I do believe in redemption.”
Efforts Monday evening to reach Altman were unsuccessful. But he
told a reporter from The State newspaper earlier in the day he would
support making third-offense and subsequent criminal domestic
violence a felony in a revised bill.
Some sentences in the revised bill are even tougher than the
proposed penalty increases in the original bill, said Rep. Gilda
Cobb-Hunter, D-Orangeburg, who again will be the bill’s lead
sponsor.
“Without a doubt, this is meaningful,” she said Monday. “I hope
the bill will pass as presented. It’s reasonable and more than
fair.”
Wilkins and Harrison, chairman of the House Judiciary
Subcommittee, said they expect the bill to breeze through a
Judiciary subcommittee hearing set for this afternoon and a full
committee meeting Wednesday.
Harrison said he and Wilkins will be among its co-sponsors.
The full committee last week created a furor when it tabled the
bill after Altman and others joked about the bill’s title, then
passed an anti-cockfighting bill.
House leaders appear to be serious about the domestic violence
bill, which Wilkins on Monday called a “top priority.’’
Wilkins and Harrison said they are unsure whether House rules
would allow the full House to consider the bill Thursday, if the
committee passes it Wednesday.
If it is not approved by the House until next week, the bill
could be considered by the full Senate only after a two-thirds vote
because it would have missed a the Sunday deadline. But Wilkins,
Harrison and Cobb-Hunter don’t see that as a major problem.
“If we want to pass it this year, it can happen,” Cobb-Hunter
said.
Harrison and Cobb-Hunter reached a tentative agreement on the
revised bill after discussions Monday. Harrison said he doesn’t
expect any major changes when it is introduced today in the
House.
The bill is a scaled-down version of Cobb-Hunter’s original bill,
which she said was based on recommendations by a domestic violence
task force appointed by former Gov. Jim Hodges.
The revised bill, among other things, would set fines of a
minimum $1,000 up to $2,500 for first-offense criminal domestic
violence. The current penalty is 30 days in jail or a $500 fine; the
revised bill doesn’t change the jail time.
The new bill, for the first time, would impose a minimum
mandatory sentence of 30 days in jail for a second offense, and
minimum one-year sentences for third and subsequent offenses and
criminal domestic violence of a high and aggravated nature.
Third and subsequent offenses, also for the first time, would be
classified as felonies. Currently, only aggravated criminal domestic
violence is a felony.
Staff writer Aaron Gould Sheinin contributed to this story. Reach
Brundrett at (803) 771-8484 or rbrundrett@thestate.com. |