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New York Times
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January 8, 2002
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Judge's Domestic Violence Ruling Creates an Outcry in
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Kentucky
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By FRANCIS X. CLINES
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EXINGTON, Ky., Jan. 4 - The violent arena of domestic abuse
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litigation has grown a bit more volatile here, now that a judge has
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decided to hold two women in contempt of court for returning to men
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who had been ordered to stay away from them. "You can't have it
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both ways," said Judge Megan Lake Thornton of Fayette County
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District Court in recently fining two women $100 and $200
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respectively for obtaining protective orders forbidding their
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partners from contacting them, then relenting and contacting the
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men.
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Ruling that the order was mutually binding, Judge Thornton also
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cited the men for contempt.
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"It drives me nuts when people just decide to do whatever they
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want," said Judge Thornton, who is experienced in the state's thick
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domestic abuse docket, which produces close to 30,000 emergency
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protective orders a year. Kentucky officials say there is a virtual
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epidemic of abusive relationships in the state.
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Judge Thornton's ruling has alarmed advocates for battered
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women, who plan to appeal it. The advocates say the finding goes
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beyond existing law and is unrealistic because some renewed
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contacts often prove unavoidable in domestic abuse cases, which
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involve economic and family dependency and other complications of
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daily living.
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The state office on domestic violence has pointedly agreed,
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warning that the ruling could cause abused women to hesitate in
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bringing their plight before the courts for fear of being chastised
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for their trouble.
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"The reality is it's easy to say they should never have
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contact," said Sherry Currens, executive director of the Kentucky
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Domestic Violence Association, an advocacy and legal protection
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group. "But we're talking about people in long-term relationships.
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They may have children in common. It's pretty hard to say, `Never
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speak again.' People have financial difficulties. They may love the
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partner. It's not an easy thing."
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But Judge Thornton declared in court, "When these orders are
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entered, you don't just do whatever you damn well please and ignore
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them."
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The ruling stunned Cindra Walker, the lawyer for the two women,
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who is with Central Kentucky Legal Services, which represents many
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of the thousands of indigent women caught in abusive
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relationships.
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"For over five years, I've been in court practically every day
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on these abuse cases," Ms. Walker said, "and I've never before had
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a victim threatened with contempt."
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"The domestic violence law is a tool for victims to use to be
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safe," not a device to punish them, she said.
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One of the women in the ruling said she eventually moved back
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with her partner while the other had occasional contacts, Ms.
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Walker said.
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Judge Thornton's office said judicial rules barred her from
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commenting on the cases. But her two rulings made clear that she
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expected the original orders against all contact to apply equally
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to the person suspected of abuse and the abused.
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"They are orders of the court," the judge declared, according to
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court transcripts obtained by The Lexington Herald-Leader. "People
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are ordered to follow them, and I don't care which side you're
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on."
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Carol Jordan, the director of the Governor's Office of Child
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Abuse and Domestic Violence, said she disagreed with Judge
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Thornton's ruling even as she sympathized with the professionals
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who must try to oversee violent domestic situations.
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"These are tough cases for judges," Ms. Jordan said. "They are
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dealing with complex human emotions. They are dealing with
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danger."
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But if the ruling stands, Ms. Jordan warned, some abused women
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will conclude that they will not be treated fairly if they seek
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refuge in the courts. This sort of ruling "absolutely increases
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abused women's level of risk" by seemingly encouraging their
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abusers, Ms. Jordan said.
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In Kentucky, as in much of the rest of the nation, abuse victims
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have increasingly turned to the courts as protective orders have
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become more accepted, said Billie Lee Dunford- Jackson, assistant
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director of family violence law and policy for the National Council
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of Juvenile and Family Court Judges. Most judges "have been making
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clear to the batterers that the issue is between the state courts
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and them," Ms. Dunford- Jackson said, rather than a domestic issue
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between two parties.
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A "sizable minority" of judges may still regard the conflicting
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parties equally in their rulings, she said, but newer state laws
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have increasingly put the focus on violent abuse as the main
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problem requiring state intervention.
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Ms. Walker's two clients, Jamie Harrison and Robin Hull,
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declined to be interviewed. Ms. Walker, one of two legal service
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lawyers handling hundreds of abuse cases in 17 counties, said, "Our
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big concern now is the chilling effect this will have."
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Two years ago, the Kentucky Legislature considered a proposal to
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apply the protective orders equally to the accused and the victim,
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Ms. Jordan said, but the notion of mutual protection, equating the
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two parties, is not part of state law.
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Judge Thornton's ruling, she contended, will "establish a
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barrier that stops abused women from seeking protection of the
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courts."
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