Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Shelters in region for domestic abuse victims

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Fayettevil­le

Peace at Home Family Shelter (479) 444-8310

Fort Smith

Fort Smith Crisis Interventi­on Center

(479) 782-182

Harrison

Sanctuary

(870) 204-5980

Rogers

Northwest Arkansas Women’s Shelter

(479) 246-0353 blame yourself,” Turney said. “It trends into self-loathing. … They might think it’s their fault. It’s frightenin­g that someone would get to that point, but the abuser will blame the person. ‘You shouldn’t have said that to me.’ ‘I’m not going to put up with that.’”

Abusive relationsh­ips hurt more than a person’s body, Turney said. The mind, too, suffers from anxiety, depression and a loss of hope.

“The person is manipulate­d into staying and living these lives of horror, and some of them are truly lives of horror,” Turney said. “Their mental health is being destroyed inch by inch.”

Katrina Hampton had no car. For long periods, she had no phone. In a journal that investigat­ors photograph­ed as evidence after her death, she wrote that she felt “trapped” and had no one to turn to.

“It was my son’s birthday today, and I didn’t get a chance to see him,” she wrote on June 9, 2017. “I keep praying but I feel like, father, I’m all out of chances with you. Please send me a sign that you haven’t given up on me. At times I know you listen but I still feel alone.”

A TURNING POINT

Helen Hampton said that in the days before her daughter’s death, Katrina hit a turning point.

She and a friend planned to go to a rehabilita­tion center together and leave town long enough to rid herself of Williams for good. Her bags were packed when her mother found her body.

Victims of domestic abuse are 70 times more likely to be killed when they are leaving their abuser or in the weeks after leaving their abuser, according to a study by the Domestic Violence Interventi­on Program.

“She was so close,” Helen said.

On Jan. 21, 2018, seven days after investigat­ors believe

Katrina died, her mother sat down on the floor next to her daughter’s body and wept. A green-and-blue comforter wrapped Katrina’s body. One hand was stretched above her head, and the cloth hid half of her face.

“She was laying to where I couldn’t see her face,” Helen said. “I couldn’t see what he did to her.”

Police did not initially reveal Katrina Hampton’s cause of death, but an affidavit for Williams’ arrest said she’d suffered blunt force trauma on her head, with five blows on the back of her skull and the side of her face.

Her cheekbones, so like her mother’s, were swollen and bruised from another strike on the bridge of her nose. There was faint bruising along her legs, too.

In April 2018, a woman told detectives that Williams had described how he would kill someone if he committed a murder, the affidavit said.

“He told her, ‘you get a bat [and] beat somebody on their head. Their elbows, kneecaps and on their feet,’” the affidavit said. “Then he said to her, ‘no traces. He didn’t want to leave no trace or something.’”

But the woman’s testimony was hypothetic­al, not a confession, and investigat­ors had little physical evidence tying Williams to his wife’s death.

Though he was arrested on a charge of first-degree murder, Williams pleaded no contest to a charge of manslaught­er in April of this year and was sentenced to eight years in prison, according to court records.

His first parole hearing is next April, according to the Arkansas Department of Correction.

ROLE OF POLICE

Between January 2015 and June 2019, Little Rock police officers responded to more than 25,000 domestic violence calls, according to data from the Police Department. Humphrey said domestic violence is so prevalent that officers respond to domestic calls daily.

“When an officer goes out to a call … they’re trying to determine ‘what’s the probabilit­y of us returning? What’s the probabilit­y of this escalating?’” Humphrey said. “If, God forbid, we have to go back, we have to start thinking, ‘do we need to remove this person?’”

Of the 203 suspects identified in homicides between 2015 and Oct. 1 of this year, 45% had histories of domestic violence. For domestic homicides, that percentage grows to 53%.

According to court records, Williams was charged with domestic battery in September 2016, six months after he and Katrina Hampton married. The charge was

dismissed.

The intimate nature of domestic violence calls makes them difficult to respond to, Humphrey said. Often, officers have only one person’s word against another. Sometimes, the victims don’t want the abusers arrested — they just want the abuse to stop. In some cases, neighbors call 911 but neither the victims nor the abusers want to involve police officers.

“It’s hard, but we have to do our job,” Humphrey said. “It’s not easy taking someone away from their home, but when you have probable cause and especially when there’s bodily injury, you have to keep that [victim] safe. You have to make an arrest.”

Sometimes the harm isn’t apparent. In that case, officers have to determine whether there is a potentiall­y dangerous situation in the home.

Officers ask the victim to fill out a lethality assessment form, a list of 12 questions used to determine whether an aggressor is a danger to anyone in the household. Whether the officer contacts the Domestic Violence Hotline depends on how many times a victim answers “yes” to the questions. Regardless, the officer gives the victim the hot line’s number and provides a Laura’s Card that explains victims’ rights and lists a variety of services available.

“It starts from the time that call is made. If an officer doesn’t show empathy and take those calls seriously, it can affect the case,” Humphrey said. “Then what you have is victims who say, ‘if that officer didn’t care, why should I care?’”

But officers can’t be in a home throughout the day and night. Officers can’t walk victims through the process of escaping violent relationsh­ips.

“That’s where victims’ advocates step in,” Hause said.

VICTIMS SERVICES

The Little Rock Police Department’s Victim Services Unit provides informatio­n, resources and referrals for victims of violent crimes, but it also provides diapers, snacks, bedsheets and, when possible, protection.

The five-person unit will grow in the coming year because the Police Department received more than $420,000 in a Victims of Crime Act grant from the Department of Justice last month to, in part, employ five victims specialist­s and a volunteer coordinato­r. One of the specialist­s will focus solely on domestic violence.

Though Hause said it’s hard to draw a line between domestic abusers and other violent offenders, she believes the two are connected.

“If these are the people that they’re sharing their life with … and they’re willing to harm them, how likely are they to harm someone who cuts them off in traffic?” Hause said. “If you’re willing to do that to someone you love, what will you do to a stranger?”

Hause has been working with victims of violent crime for more than 20 years. She said she’s seen victims escape abusive relationsh­ips and go on to lead happy lives. She’s seen others return to their abusers again and again. She also has spoken to domestic violence victims who later became homicide victims.

“Off the top of my head, I can think of four who were killed by their abuser,” Hause said. “I worked with them when they were domestic battery victims, and I worked with their family when there was a homicide. That is hard. As an advocate, it is hard.”

Hause tells a story of a young woman she counseled more than a decade ago.

“The first time I saw her, she said ‘he kicked me in the back,’” Hause said. “When she lifted her shirt, she had the outline of a boot on her back, and it had bruised her so bad that you could see the exact tread of the boot.”

The woman went to a shelter, but Hause found out later that she’d returned to her abuser. Then, one day, the woman’s body was found in a ditch out in the county. Her murder was never solved.

“She was such a neat girl,” Hause said. “She was one of those girls who had that personalit­y and that spark. Just a little sassy but so nice and warm. … That one was really hard. Nobody deserves that.”

THE LEGACY

Often, domestic abuse also affects children in the home. In the 59 domestic homicides, nine children younger than 18 were killed. In other instances, children become witnesses, as in the stabbing death of Allah-U Akbar, 56, who bled out on a hotel room floor as his 9-year-old daughter called 911 last month.

“So many times kids are in those homes,” Hause said. “That’s what becomes a normal relationsh­ip for them. Some of us will grow up to recognize that it’s not normal, but not everybody has the opportunit­y to know that.”

Even children who are not physically abused are affected by abuse in the home, Turney said.

“It creates a bit of a legacy,” Turney said. “If you watched your dad beat your mom from 1 to 18, you’re likely to be a victim or an abuser. We look at our parents as role models for our entire lives.”

Helen Hampton is raising her daughter’s five children now. The youngest turned 3 this year. Al’lah was Katrina’s only daughter. She had prayed for a little girl for years. Helen said her daughter loved her children more than anything, and the journal that investigat­ors photograph­ed is littered with notes about how much she missed them.

Al’lah has high, strong cheekbones and deep, brown eyes, like her mother and her grandmothe­r. She smiles easily and widely. Katrina was like that when she was young — always smiling, always happy, her mother said.

But where Katrina was shy and withdrawn, Al’lah shines around other people.

Helen says more than anything, she wants the cycle of abuse to stop with her daughter. When she’s not at work and not taking care of the children, she spends her time planning what she will say if allowed to speak at Williams’ parole hearing.

“I can’t let him do it again,” she said. “I can’t let him do this to someone else’s daughter.”

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