Story last updated at 8:17 a.m. Wednesday, April 16, 2003 Domestic violence penalties would get tougher under bill
Associated
Press
COLUMBIA--People convicted of criminal domestic
violence would face tougher penalties under a bill the Senate passed
Tuesday.
A conviction of causing physical harm to a spouse or other household
member would bring a fine of $500 and up to 30 days in jail. A second
offense within 10 years brings the same penalty and a third offense could
mean as much as three years in prison. When an abuser is convicted of
using a weapon, the offender could spend up to 10 years in prison for the
felony.
South Carolina "leads the league in domestic violence," with one of the
nation's highest rates, said the bill's chief sponsor, Sen. Jim Ritchie,
R-Spartanburg. "For far too long, South Carolina has treated domestic
violence as an incidental crime of passion."
"Right now in South Carolina, serious criminal domestic violence is a
misdemeanor," said Sen. Robert Ford, D-Charleston. He has tried to get
parts of the bill passed for two years. A spouse "can half kill her and be
charged with a misdemeanor. That's just not fair to women."
Ritchie said increasing the penalties "to the level of a violent crime
and a felony is essential to breaking the cycle of criminal domestic
violence in this state."