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    NSTI Highlighted in USDoJ Report

    April 4, 2013

    The National Strangulation Training Institute was recently highlighted in the U.S. Department of Justice’s report on Indian Country Accomplishments, 2009-Present.  The report highlights the partnership  Continue Reading »

    The National Strangulation Training Institute was recently highlighted in the U.S. Department of Justice’s report on Indian Country Accomplishments, 2009-Present.  The report highlights the partnership between the National Indian Country Training Initiative, an initiative of the USDoJ, and the NSTI to provide training on strangulation and suffocation crimes to 17 tribes, U.S. Attorney’s Offices, the FBI and the Bureau of Indian Affairs. For the full report, click here.

    Finding the Right Tools to Respond to Strangulation, Domestic Violence

    March 21, 2013

    Gilmour says he asked Susan Michalski – an RN with experience in intimate partner violence and sexual assault – to talk with Kearney first responders,  Continue Reading »

    Gilmour says he asked Susan Michalski – an RN with experience in intimate partner violence and sexual assault – to talk with Kearney first responders, doctors, and nurses about the signs and consequences of strangulation.

    “What we know about that connection with domestic violence and intimate partner violence is that sometimes it’s the next thing to homicide,” says Michalski, the president of Practical Applications.

    Michalski says treating the medical side of a victim is only one aspect. She says it’s important that agencies work together and create a safety net for the victim.

    “One of the things that I think is really important is for all of us to ask not why does this individual stay, but what do they need?” she says.

    Gilmour says they’re not trying to make expert medical witnesses, that saving a life is the most important part of this training, but he says the more thorough a medical report is, the stronger a criminal case could be.

    “These folks who respond as first responders need to know what to look for, to look out for victim safety and life and health and that benefits everyone,” he says.

    Michalski says Nebraska became a felony state for intimate partner violence in 2004, and since then she’s seen changes in how police, medical professionals, and the courts handle domestic violence cases.

    To view the video of this report, click here.

    Casey Gwinn Discusses Impact of Strangulation Crimes

    March 11, 2013

    View Casey Gwinn’s new video on the frequency and seriousness of strangulation crimes here.

    View Casey Gwinn’s new video on the frequency and seriousness of strangulation crimes here.

    Canyon Officers Learn to Detect Strangulation

    February 26, 2013

    That training is the source of some sobering statistics, including the fact that nearly half of all domestic violence murder victims experience at least one  Continue Reading »

    That training is the source of some sobering statistics, including the fact that nearly half of all domestic violence murder victims experience at least one non-fatal strangulation.

    Victims tend to be too afraid or embarrassed to mention that they’ve been strangled, said Nampa Detective Kari Seibel, who handles all domestic violence cases in the city. Perpetrators tend to downplay strangulation or choking, she said, as if it’s inconsequential compared to hitting.

    In reality, it’s more dangerous.

    Cutting off someone’s air and blood flow is a damaging and intimidating act, Seibel said. And it’s likely a sign of lethal action to come.

    “That’s a heavy point I try to hit home when I talk to victims,” she said. “I can’t express how important it is that I get across to them, ‘You almost died. Your kids almost lost their mother. Don’t become a homicide victim.’

    “To hear, ‘I suspect you’ll be killed at the hands of somebody you love,’ that’s a powerful thing.”

    RECOGNIZING SIGNS

    The most recent homicide in the Treasure Valley involved a strangulation, police say. Bruce Macomb, 62, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of his 58-year-old wife, Beba, at their Boise home.

    Learning to recognize the signs of strangulation, take time to build a case and get help for victims is essential to the Nampa Police Department’s mission, said Chief Craig Kingsbury.

    Last month, Kingsbury mandated that all employees – from officers and dispatchers to administrators and clerks – complete the short online training course.

    “We could have a victim that has been strangled come up to the front window or one of our substations, and I want the first face they see to recognize the signs,” he said.

    “The big deal is we may save their lives.”

    Canyon County Sheriff Kieran Donahue issued a similar mandate last week, requiring the training for “any of our officers and dispatch personnel that would have some kind of contact with victims in these kinds of cases.”

    Crime lab workers and command staff, including Donahue, also will take the training, he said.

    “I think I’m going to be the first sheriff in the state of Idaho to make it mandatory, but I think we’re going to see many others do the same thing,” said Donahue, who launched a “Man Up Crusade” last year to increase awareness of domestic violence and raise money for victims.

    “This is an extraordinary tool for our officers, to educate them that … there may be more than what they’re being told or what they’re seeing,” he said.

    RARELY OBVIOUS

    Signs of strangulation are often subtle and unexpected, said Nampa Detective Cpl. Angela Weekes, who has long led the police charge against domestic violence in the city.

    It could be a raspy voice or the victim could be urinating on herself – a common result of strangulation that victims are unlikely to report unless asked. Rarely, she said, are there obvious signs, such as finger marks on the throat.

    Weekes said 62 percent of strangulation victims don’t have external marks.

    “Just looking for strangulation marks, we really missed the boat for years, including me,” said Weekes, who wrote the initial grant for the Nampa Family Justice Center and offers training in the Treasure Valley and beyond.

    Officers are now trained to assess domestic violence cases according to risk indicators, of which attempted strangulation is one of the four leading danger signs. The others are forced sex, a recent separation and extreme possessiveness.

    “In the old days, the goal when you responded to a domestic violence case was to just get the people to settle down, and don’t make us come back,” said Kingsbury, a 21-year Nampa veteran who became chief last month. “Now you go there and handle it as a major crime scene, which it is.

    “The emphasis for the officers is to make sure they spend time on the call, ask questions and document the scene.”

    BOOSTING PROSECUTION

    “The cases are a lot better prepared for prosecution, and that results in a lot more guilty pleas,” Kingsbury said.

    Plus, he said, if police can establish that an assailant tried to strangle a victim, a crime that otherwise would have been a misdemeanor automatically becomes a felony under Idaho law.

    The Nampa police’s ramped-up efforts to fight domestic violence include creating Seibel’s position last June, the first time one detective has been assigned to oversee all of the cases.

    “She probably has the largest caseload of any detective,” Kingsbury said.

    Seibel said that in 195 calendar days of work, she has been assigned 199 cases. Statistics don’t show how many of those cases involved attempted strangulation.

    Now that officers are better equipped to detect it, she said, “we expect our numbers to go up, unfortunately.”

    Gael Strack, National Strangulation Training Institute project director, praised Kingsbury and other law enforcement leaders who are mandating the training. The institute aims to have 5,000 U.S. officers complete the training by March 31.

    “If we can prevent even one homicide by early prosecution of an abuser when he strangles his partner and she survives, all our work will be worth it,” Strack said.

    A New Crime, but Convictions Are Elusive

    February 19, 2013

    The boyfriend, an M.B.A. student named Anthony DeMaio, one of about 15,000 people typically charged in New York City each year with attacking a partner,  Continue Reading »

    The boyfriend, an M.B.A. student named Anthony DeMaio, one of about 15,000 people typically charged in New York City each year with attacking a partner, was charged with misdemeanor assault. He was also charged with a new crime: a felony called second-degree strangulation, created in 2010 to help prosecutors fight domestic violence by upgrading a form of assault they say is favored by abusers.

    New York’s law, like dozens of choking statutes across the nation, is popular with law enforcement officials. In 2011 in New York City, 1,458 domestic violence assaults that would have been considered misdemeanors under the old law – more than 9 percent of them – were charged as felony strangulation.

    But second-degree strangulation – choking to the point of injury, impairment, stupor or unconsciousness – can leave ambiguous marks or no marks at all, making it tricky to prove. “If you don’t know how to follow the bread crumbs it’s very easy to miss,” said Gael Strack, chief executive of the National Strangulation Training Institute, an anti-domestic-violence group based in San Diego. Of the thousands of defendants charged in New York City, fewer than 20 have gone to trial, state officials said. Experts say that thousands of police and medical professionals around the country have not been trained on how to execute the new statutes.

    And in Mr. DeMaio’s case, strangulation was a tough sell. I know because I was on the jury.

    Choking, experts say, is one of the most pervasive forms of domestic violence, with its overtones of power and control, and one of the best predictors of more serious violence. “A woman who has been choked is seven times more likely to be the victim of a domestic violence homicide later,” Ms. Strack said. Until the new law, though, unless it resulted in serious physical injury, like brain damage, choking could be classified no higher than misdemeanor assault, which carries a maximum sentence of one year but rarely draws more than a few months. In recent years, choking assaults have drawn the attention of lawmakers across the country. New York is one of 30 states that have criminalized that kind of assault.

    Under New York’s law, second-degree strangulation is a Class D felony, calling for at least two years in prison – the same as second-degree assault, which requires infliction of serious physical injury.

    Wanda Lucibello, chief of the special victims unit in the Brooklyn district attorney’s office, said the new statute “helps us as prosecutors to address what happens when a victim comes in and says, ‘He choked me.’ ” She added, “We now have a whole repertoire of follow-up questions to elicit exactly the results of that action, things that are not as necessarily visible to the naked eye as a punch would be. Were your airways obstructed? Were there changes in your breathing or speech?”

    In Mr. DeMaio’s case, though, it did not appear that all evidence had been collected. The victim, Ainsley Gill, was the trial’s first witness. Ms. Gill, a college graduate who works in interior design, said on the stand that she and Mr. DeMaio had been together for a year. He had beaten her on other occasions, she said, but she loved him because she “saw good in him.” On that spring morning in 2011, Ms. Gill testified, he burst into the bathroom and accused her of receiving a text message from another man. When he slammed her head against the tub, she said, she saw stars. And as he squeezed her neck, she said, she thought she was going to die.

    Police photos of her injuries taken soon after the assault were projected on a courtroom screen: scalp and hip abrasions, a bruised eye, contusions on her arm, breast and back. A close-up of Ms. Gill’s neck showed a rash of red dots. The officer who responded to her 911 call testified that he had observed bruising and requested an ambulance. But he did not write down that he had seen any injury to her neck, nor did the hospital emergency-room team in its brief written report.

    The first professional to flag a possible choking was a police officer from the Domestic Violence Unit, Samantha Sonnett. At the hospital, she said, she saw marks on Ms. Gill’s throat consistent with choking. She testified that when she called Mr. DeMaio, told him that his girlfriend was in the hospital and instructed him to come to the station house, one of his first questions was, “Is she still breathing?”

    A forensic pathologist called by the prosecutor testified that the dots on Ms. Gill’s neck were petechiae – broken blood vessels suggesting choking. The defense’s expert, an emergency room doctor, dismissed the dots, saying that if Ms. Gill had been choked, her eyes would have been the first area to exhibit petechiae.

    Ms. Strack said in an interview after the trial that in fact, collecting visual evidence of choking was not a simple thing.

    “Petechiae can be under the eyelid,” she said. “This type of crime needs very specific training on how you photograph it. Bruising and swelling can turn up 24 or 36 hours later.”

    Ms. Gill had testified that her bruising and swelling worsened over time. But no photos were offered to verify this. Ms. Gill’s roommate said she witnessed Ms. Gill tell both the first officer and medical professionals at the hospital that Mr. DeMaio had choked her.

    In a telephone interview, Mr. DeMaio’s lawyer, H. Benjamin Perez, said that his client had no comment. But Mr. Perez said the strangulation charge was being overused. “It seems like it’s being tested to see where it can stick,” he said.

    Mr. DeMaio did not take the stand. He kept his head down, filling pages of a legal pad.

    We the jury were eight women and four men, a mix of white and Hispanic, gay and straight, athletic to sedentary, all educated past high school.

    We quickly agreed that Mr. DeMaio had committed misdemeanor assault, defined as injuring someone either intentionally, recklessly or negligently. On the strangulation charge, though, it was as if we’d tuned into different instruments at a concert. I found Ms. Gill, the domestic violence officer, the roommate and the prosecution’s pathologist credible. Other jurors argued that the first officer on the scene and the emergency-room team would never have failed to overlook something as major as choking.

    We reviewed the judge’s instructions. Was the victim’s normal breathing impeded? Yes. Was it intentional? I thought so – Mr. DeMaio had asked if she was still breathing. And the red dots on Ms. Gill’s neck, I argued, constituted the necessary “physical injury.”

    “That could have happened if he punched her with his watch on and it scraped across her neck,” one juror countered. “Maybe if he dragged her by her hair across the carpet.”

    In the end, I went along to avoid causing a mistrial. We found Mr. DeMaio guilty of misdemeanor assault, not guilty on strangulation. The judge said we were the first jury he knew of in Manhattan to try second-degree strangulation. As we filed back into the jury room, some jurors marveled at being legal guinea pigs.

    “Can I change my vote?” one half-joked.

    Another juror, a British woman as diffident as Miss Marple, met me at the elevator. “We all know he did it,” she said. “We just couldn’t prove it.”

    Our verdict, it turned out, fit the pattern: none of the 19 people who have been tried on second-degree strangulation charges in New York City have been convicted of it, according to the state.

    At the sentencing in November, Mr. Perez argued that Mr. DeMaio had been “overcharged” and that if he had been charged with only a misdemeanor, he would have probably been let off with probation. Mr. DeMaio read a prepared statement in which he apologized personally to Ms. Gill, though without looking at her.

    The judge, Bruce Allen, imposed the sentence prosecutors requested: 60 days in jail – typical for misdemeanors – and 3 years’ probation, anger-management counseling and a 5-year protection order.

    Mr. DeMaio was released from Rikers last month after 38 days. His sentence was reduced for good behavior.

    Randy Leonard contributed reporting.

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