DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
Approximately 4 million women are battered in the United
States every year. Most domestic assaults are not reported to law
enforcement agencies or domestic violence shelters.
Injuries that battered women receive are at least as
serious as injuries suffered in 90% of violent felony crimes, yet
under California state law these crimes are allowed to be treated
as misdemeanors.
Californians made 248,828 domestic violence calls to law
enforcement agencies in 1992; 70% (175,353) of those calls
involved weapons. California does not track how many of these
calls result in arrest or conviction.
HOMICIDE AND INJURY
California women are 11 times more likely than men to be
killed by their spouse, and half as likely than men to be killed
by a stranger. For both women and men, the majority of murders
are committed by acquaintances (including ex-husband, employer,
employee, etc.).
ESCAPING ABUSE
Although divorced and separated women compose only 7% of
the population in the U.S., they account for 75% of all battered
women and report being battered 14 times as often as women still
living with their partners. Women who leave their batterers are
at a 75% greater risk of being killed by the batterer than those
who stay.
There are nearly three times as many animal shelters in
the U.S. as there are shelters for battered women. There are
inadequate numbers of rape crisis centers and domestic violence
shelters in California to serve the numbers of women who need
services.
RAPE
One in seven women who have ever been married have been
raped by their husbands or ex-husbands, in 1/3 of these
relationships, the rape was repeated 2 to 20 times. in another
third, the rape was repeated over twenty times.
An estimated 20% of reported forcible rapes in California
result in an arrest, and an estimated 8% of arrest for forcible
rape result in a conviction. Since many rapes are not reported to
law enforcement officials, it is estimated that less than 1% of
all rapes result in a conviction.
In California there were 137 arrests for spousal rape in
1992. Only 11% of these arrest resulted in a state prison
sentence. Of the 23 rapists convicted in lower courts, none were
sentenced to state prison.
More than 1/3 women, who are raped by someone they know,
do not report the crime because they fear reprisal or believe the
police will be inefficient.
ECONOMIC IMPACT
Up to 50% of all homeless women and children in this
country are fleeing domestic violence.
Abusive husbands and lovers harass 74% of employed
battered women at work, either in person or over the telephone,
causing 20% to lose their jobs.
Medical expenses form domestic violence total at least $3
to $5 billion annually. Businesses forfeit another $100 million
in lost wages, sick leave, absenteeism, and non-productivity.
CHILDREN
As violence against women becomes more severe and more
frequent in the home, children experience a 300% increase in
physical violence by the male battered.
More than 53% of male abusers heat their children.
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