COLUMBIA, S.C. - Lawyers will work for free to
help prosecute criminal domestic violence cases under a new program
by state Attorney General Henry McMaster.
Both criminal and civil lawyers will volunteer their time and be
trained by judges, support groups and prosecutors, McMaster said
Thursday.
National experts have rated South Carolina as one of the worst
states in the country for fighting domestic violence.
Criminal domestic violence charges are often misdemeanors tried
in magistrate's court. Defendants can retain lawyers, but most of
the time the cases are prosecuted by the police officer who
investigated the case instead of a trained lawyer.
That leaves the state without representation, leading to dropped
charges and fewer convictions, McMaster said.
The attorney general was unsure how much it should cost to give
the lawyers the 20 hours of training needed to try cases, but said
it "wouldn't be that much."
At least 30 volunteers have signed up for the program, which is
scheduled to begin by November in Orangeburg and Kershaw counties.
McMaster said he is close to hiring a program coordinator and
eventually wants the program to run statewide.
McMaster got the idea for his first major initiative since taking
office in January by meeting with judges, victim advocates,
counselors, police officers and Chief Justice Jean Toal, who called
the program "a dream come true."
It is important to focus on preventing domestic violence and
punishing offenders early, Toal said.
"I've been hearing death penalty cases for 15 years now as a
member of the Supreme Court and all but two of them the defendants
were much involved in domestic violence from the time they were
children," she said.
State Rep. Gilda Cobb-Hunter, a victims' advocate for 25 years,
recently ran into the problem of police officers trying cases when
she was a juror in a criminal domestic violence case.
The defendant was convicted on just one of three charges. "The
cop did the best he could but he's not an attorney," said
Cobb-Hunter, D-Orangeburg.
McMaster applauded his predecessor Charlie Condon for his work to
curb domestic violence. Condon ordered prosecutors to stop dropping
criminal domestic violence cases. McMaster is continuing that
policy.
"It's time now to move to the next step and I understand that the
only way to attack a problem of this magnitude is to have a team of
people working together," McMaster said.