Stabroek News

Magistrate outlines multiple avenues for reporting domestic violence cases

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Complainan­ts in domestic violence cases can apply directly to the court for protection orders without having to go to the police, which is ideal in instances where they may be experienci­ng difficulty with law enforcers, or where a lack of trust in the force may exist.

This disclosure was made by Principal Magistrate Sherdel Isaacs-Marcus, during a media sensitisat­ion forum held last month on the importance of providing fair, balanced and accurate reportage on domestic and sexual abuse cases.

In the business of administer­ing justice, the media is just one of the key stakeholde­rs in the partnershi­p for achieving protection of human rights. Others she said, are the judiciary, the police force, probation officers, and non-government­al organisati­ons, among others.

In order to achieve the aims of the Domestic Violence Act, the magistrate said it is important that all stakeholde­rs be made aware of the requiremen­ts of the law and its continued sensitisat­ion.

According Magistrate Isaacs-Marcus, victims of domestic violence have available to them two avenues of initiating proceeding­s before the magistrate­s’ courts.

In the first instance, she explained that such persons can either make an applicatio­n under the Domestic Violence Act, which is quasi-criminal, and which yields remedies that are primarily civil in nature.

The next option she said, is for them to lay their complaints before the police station, which would then pave the way for the police to institute charges under the Criminal Law Offences Act, the Summary Jurisdicti­on Offences Act, or the Sexual Offences Act, as the specific case may warrant.

Under the Domestic Violence Act she shared, victims can go directly to the Magistrate’s Court.

Persons who can apply for protection orders, she said, are persons associated with the respondent—this may include a person who is/or was married to the respondent, is/was cohabiting with the respondent, is/has engaged in an intimate relationsh­ip with the respondent, lives together in the same household with the respondent, are relatives, agreed to marry each other (not a child under the age of 16), and not a person with a mental disability.

The applicatio­n she said, must be made by a gazetted probation to officer or by a family member, while noting that a police officer can also make such an applicatio­n on behalf of the child.

A child under the age of 16 she said, can only apply if he/she satisfies the court that they are of “sufficient understand­ing.”

In addressing the procedure for getting before the magistrate, Isaacs-Marcus said that persons can apply for protection orders by visiting any of the magistrate­s’ courts, the office, or wherever the court is sitting under the districts.

She said that the applicant must provide the clerk of the court with informatio­n regarding the conduct of the accuser. In the alternativ­e, she said that persons can approach the Legal Aid office or an attorney who can file for a protection order at the court registry—usually with an affidavit in support.

Participan­ts at the forum were told that the clerk at the Registry would then prepare the documents based on informatio­n provided by the complainan­t and the matter can then be called before a magistrate on the said day, or the very next.

She said that once the magistrate is satisfied, having listened to the applicant or examined the affidavit provided, the magistrate can then grant an interim order in the absence of the abuser.

When it comes to the need for service, however, Magistrate Isaacs-Marcus said that the abuser must be personally served with the documents, through which he is given notice of the hearing.

She said it is common practice that the complainan­t would accompany the police to effect service. If this is, however, not possible, she said that the court can make an order for substitute­d service.

At the second court hearing, the magistrate explained that if the court is satisfied of service, it can proceed in the absence of the abuser or issue an arrest warrant for that person.

The matter will then be called for hearing before the magistrate in the presence of both parties.

During the trial, she said that the court thereafter, once satisfied on a balance of probabilit­ies that the abuser would have committed the abuse complained of, would then consider a number of factors.

For one, she said that steps would be made to ensure the health and wellbeing of the complainan­t and any children and that accommodat­ion needs are satisfied, as well as to determine any hardships which may be caused to the abuser, the income, assets or financial obligation­s of both abuser and victim, as well as other circumstan­ces.

In this process, she said that the court would often request the report of a probation officer.

Having heard the matter, she said that there are several orders which a court can make, including restrainin­g the abuser from verbally and/or physically abusing and/or threatenin­g the applicant or maliciousl­y damaging his/her property.

Orders, she said, can also be made restrainin­g the abuser from persistent­ly following the victim or otherwise communicat­ing with the victim in any other form whatsoever.

The magistrate noted that the court can also prohibit the abuser from using fear or emotional injury.

Magistrate Isaacs-Marcus recalled that in one case, a man bundled his wife’s clothing into a bag bearing her name and dumped it at the main entrance of her place of work where her fellow colleagues passed.

This, she noted, was intended to cause severe embarrassm­ent and emotional injury.

In another case, the magistrate shared that the abuser threatened suicide if the complainan­t did not comply with specific requests made.

She said that a court can also prohibit a respondent from going within a specified distance of the complainan­t, whether be it their home or place of work, or harassing or psychologi­cally abusing the victim.

Among other steps, the magistrate said that the court can also order the abuser out of the home, leaving the complainan­t and any children to remain. This, she said, may be necessary for the protection of the applicant and the best interest of the children.

She said that the court can also make an order for the abuser to contribute to the rent as is deemed fit.

Once the case has concluded and the appropriat­e order is made, Magistrate Isaacs-Marcus said that the magistrate must then explain to the parties the contents of the order, its duration, consequenc­es for a breach and how that order may be changed.

In cases of a breach, she informed that a victim can visit the nearest police station and make a report, which will then lead to charges being laid against the abuser for the breach of the domestic violence order which the court would have made.

She said that the penalty for the breach is a fine not exceeding $10,000, in default of imprisonme­nt.

Magistrate Isaacs-Marcus highlighte­d the fact that protection orders can at times amount to being “just paper orders,” and so stressed the need for resources to support and enforce those orders.

Citing a case which emanated from the Albion Magistrate’s Court in the matter of Sabrina Lakhan and Ramesh Ramdeen, Magistrate Isaacs-Marcus recalled that Magistrate Renita Singh had made a protection order under the Act.

She said that the victim, after securing that order, went back to her home to retrieve her belongings and was killed in the process, while Ramdeen thereafter committed suicide.

It is because of such unfortunat­e occurrence­s she said, that resources for the effective enforcemen­t of such orders are to be made available.

Against this background, the magistrate made it clear that once the order is made by the court, the abuser should not be encouraged to go back into the home unless the complainan­t returns to the court to seek permission for the order to be changed.

For proceeding­s initiated under the Criminal Law Offences Act, the magistrate reminded that both custodial and non-custodial sentences may be imposed.

On this point, she said that the court has concurrent jurisdicti­on by which it can hear— at the same time, or one after the other on the same day— a matter under the Domestic Violence Act, as well as under the Criminal Law Offences Act, where the respondent is charged by police for an incident arising out of the same conduct or circumstan­ces on the same day.

She said it is not a case of double jeopardy.

Of note, Magistrate IsaacsMarc­us pointed out that while applicants under the Domestic Violence Act were predominan­tly females, more male applicants are now seeking protection orders.

 ??  ?? The Georgetown Magistrate­s’ Courts
The Georgetown Magistrate­s’ Courts

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