Rome News-Tribune

Virtual forum spotlights guns and domestic violence

♦ ‘I didn’t want him to be the last thing I saw,’ a survivor shares.

- By Kelcey Walker Kwalker@calhountim­es.com

The U. S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia hosted a virtual community forum on firearms and domestic violence.

The online event last week was an effort to promote awareness and start a dialogue about the lethal combinatio­n of guns and physical abuse.

Speakers included Janet Paulsen, a survivor of domestic abuse who was shot six times by her then- husband Scott Bland in November 2015.

Sometime during her twin sons’ football practice on Nov. 5, 2015, Paulsen said, she returned to her home in Cobb County and found Bland leaning against the garage, waiting for her with a gun.

She put her car into reverse and crashed through the garage door and into the neighborin­g yard. Her husband followed. She continued to try to escape but was shot six times.

“I knew instantly I was paralyzed,” Paulsen shared. “He walked over to me and stood over me, and I put up my hand to block his face. I didn’t want him to be the last thing I saw. He said, and it’s the only thing he said during the whole attack, ‘Watch this,’ and turned the gun on himself. It clicked because he had unloaded the magazine on me.”

Bland returned to the garage, reloaded his firearm and shot himself. He later died at Kennestone Hospital.

Paulsen was dead on arrival at the hospital but was revived by a hospital trauma surgeon who acted quickly to clamp her aorta so blood could get to her brain and lungs. She is now paralyzed in one quadrant of her body. Her paralysis extends from her right hip through to the right toe.

Paulsen explained that her husband had been abusive many times before the shooting.

She said he was an alcoholic who threatened her when she, after five years of abuse, said she wanted a divorce. His threats had escalated, so she contacted her attorney and the police. Both advised her to seek a temporary protective order.

Armed with photos of the 74 firearms in Bland’s collection, she went to Cobb County family court to request the protective order. It was granted later that afternoon, but Paulsen said police were unable to confiscate the one gun remaining in his vehicle.

It was the weapon he shot her with a mere five days later.

“We are one of the only states left in the nation that does not have legislatio­n in place to remove firearms after a TPO ( temporary protective order) has been put into place,” Paulsen said.

Dekalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston and U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia Byung J. “Bjay” Pak said they are working to close loopholes that still exist in confiscati­ng firearms from violent repeat offenders, especially those with a history of domestic violence.

“One of the things we did when I was first elected as solicitor general in 2011 was start a project that would address firearms in domestic violence cases at the misdemeano­r level. We created a protocol for the surrender of firearms by perpetrato­rs of misdemeano­r domestic violence,” Boston said.

“Bjay knew I was passionate about filling this loophole in the law and I was excited when he became U.S. Attorney because I knew he was in the position to help us fill that gap where the law wasn’t working for us.”

Pak asked Boston and her team to identify cases they could send to his office for federal prosecutio­n that could not be prosecuted locally. So far, over 30 cases have been presented. Of those, 15 cases are pending. Three offenders have been sentenced at the federal level.

Making legislativ­e changes to fill these loopholes is something that, according to Wednesday’s speakers, must come from local representa­tives.

“This kind of tragedy is very common. Someone sitting right next to you in your office or in traffic or at the grocery store could be suffering from this. Women are more likely to be shot by an intimate partner than by a stranger. Think about that,” said Sharla Jackson of the Prosecutin­g Attorneys’ Council of Georgia. “Contact your local representa­tives. We have to be more open and more accepting that these crimes happen. It is so common. We can’t ignore it or sweep it under the rug.”

 ?? Contribute­d ?? Janet Paulson was shot six times by her then-husband Scott Bland in November 2015. She now shares her story in an effort to help others escape their abusers.
Contribute­d Janet Paulson was shot six times by her then-husband Scott Bland in November 2015. She now shares her story in an effort to help others escape their abusers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States