Domestic Violence Rates Remain At Troubling Levels
By Terri Dee
Indiana News Service
INDIANAPOLIS — October is National Domestic Violence Awareness Month. The most recent study from the Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence cites a 181% increase in domestic-violence homicides between 2020 and mid-2021 in Indiana.
And 911 call centers reported high call rates in zip codes that were disproportionally affected by the pandemic. The coalition’s Homicide Reduction Strategies Coordinator Caryn Burton said these rates can be difficult to track.
“We know that domestic violence is under-reported,” said Burton. “We know that survivors do not always report what is happening in their home or within their relationship – whether it is to healthcare providers, whether it’s to law enforcement, whether it’s to family and friends.”
She said domestic violence is the second-most under-reported crime in the United States, behind only sexual assault.
The National Domestic Violence hotline number is (800) 799-7233.
Between July 2022 and June of this year, the coalition reports 78 confirmed homicides resulting from domestic violence in Indiana.
A person threatened by domestic violence can get a restraining or protective order – a court ruling that requires an abuser to stay away – although too often, the abuser ignores it.
For years, court advocates were present to explain what survivors could expect when seeking a restraining order. Burton said the group that provided these advocates in the Marion County court system stopped in 2021.
“When a survivor maybe doesn’t receive some safety planning assistance with that protective order, they may remain vulnerable to that escalation of violence,” said Burton, “because they haven’t really gone through that entire process of understanding, ‘Okay, now I’ve got the protective order, but what does that mean for me?'”
According to this year’s Domestic Violence by State report on the website ‘wisevoter.com,’ almost 43% of women in Indiana experience some form of domestic violence – ranking the state fifth in the nation for domestic violence incidents.