Domestic violence law abuses rights of men
By Phyllis Schlafly
In January 2006, President George W. Bush
signed the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act without public
debate, even though evidence has surfaced that Congress should have examined it
before the law was extended.
The act, which costs nearly $1 billion per year, is one of the major ways
former President Bill Clinton bought the support of radical feminists.
Why Republicans passed this bill is a mystery. It's unlikely that the
feminists who will spend all that money will ever vote Republican.
Passage of the Violence Against Women Act was a major priority of the
American Bar Association for whose members it is a cash cow. More than 300
courts have implemented specialized docket processes to address the cases
stemming from the act, more than 1 million women have obtained protection orders
from the courts, and more than 660 new state laws pertaining to domestic
violence have been passed, all of which produce profitable work for lawyers.
A recently issued ABA document called “Tool for Attorneys” provides lawyers
with a list of suggestive questions to encourage their clients to make
domestic-violence charges. Knowing that a woman can get a restraining order
against the father of her children in an ex parte proceeding without any
evidence, and that she will never be punished for lying, domestic-violence
accusations have become a major tactic for securing sole child custody.
Voluminous documentation to dispel the feminist myths that created and have
perpetuated the act are spelled out in seven reports just issued by an
organization called Respecting Accuracy in Domestic Abuse Reporting, or RADAR,
and in an 80-page report called “Family Violence in America” published by the
American Coalition for Fathers & Children.
For example, it is a shocker to discover that acts don't have to be violent
to be punished under the definition of domestic violence. Name-calling,
put-downs, shouting, negative looks or gestures, ignoring opinions or constant
criticizing can all be legally labeled domestic violence.
The ABA report states flatly: “Domestic violence does not necessarily involve
physical violence.” The feminists' mantra is, “You don't have to be beaten to be
abused.”
Advocates of the Violence Against Women Act assert that domestic violence is
a crime, yet family courts often adjudicate domestic violence as a civil (not a
criminal) matter. This enables courts to deny the accused all Bill of Rights and
due process protections that are granted to even the most heinous of criminals.
Specifically, the accused is not innocent until proven guilty but is presumed
guilty, and he doesn't have to be convicted “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Due
process rights, such as trial by jury and the right of free counsel to poor
defendants, are regularly denied, and false accusations are not covered by
perjury law. The act provides funding for legal representation for accusers but
not for defendants.
Those concerned about judicial activism, i.e., judges legislating from the
bench, could observe judges doing this every day in domestic violence cases.
Every time a judge issues a restraining order, the judge creates new crimes for
which an individual can be arrested and jailed without trial for doing what no
statute prohibits and what anyone else may lawfully do.
This criminalizing of ordinary private behavior and incarceration without due
process follows classic police-state practices. Evidence is irrelevant, hearsay
is admissible, defendants have no right to confront their accusers, and forced
confessions are a common feature.
Some of these injustices result from overzealous law enforcement officials
(sometimes running for office), and some from timid judges who grant restraining
orders and deny due process to defendants for fear of being blamed for
subsequent violence. Most of this, however, is the result of feminist activism
and the taxpayer money given them by Congress.
The ease and speed with which women can get restraining orders without fear
of punishment for lying indicates that the dynamic driving domestic-violence
accusations is child custody rather than violence. Restraining orders don't
prevent violence, but they do have the immediate effect of separating fathers
from their children and imprisoning fathers for acts that are perfectly legal if
done by anyone else (such as attending a public event at which his child is
performing).
The restraining order issued against TV talk show host David Letterman,
allegedly to protect a woman who claimed he was harassing her through his TV
broadcasts, is a good example of how easy it is to get a court order based on
false allegations. Another ridiculous restraining order was issued against
celebutante Paris Hilton to protect a man she had bad-mouthed.
Violence Against Women Act money is used by anti-male feminists to train
judges, prosecutors and police in the feminist myths that domestic violence is a
contagious epidemic, and that men are naturally batterers and women are
naturally victims. Feminists lobby state legislators to pass must-arrest and
must-prosecute laws even when police don't observe any crime and can't produce a
witness to testify about an alleged crime.
Assault and battery are crimes in every state and should be prosecuted. But
people so accused should be entitled to their constitutional rights. After all,
is this America?
Schlafly is a lawyer, conservative political analyst and the author of
“
The Supremacists: The Tyranny of Judges And How to Stop It
.”