Daily Press (Sunday)

How to protect women from domestic violence

- By E.J. Graff The Washington Post

Rachel Louise Snyder got so deeply immersed in researchin­g domestic abuse that she had a breakdown and sobbed uncontroll­ably for10 days. Diagnosed with vicarious trauma, she took a year off.

And she came back. The result is her new book, “No Visible Bruises.” In a writing style that’s as gripping as good fiction, as intimate as memoir and deeply informed, she takes us into the lives of the abused, the abusers and the survivors. The stories are devastatin­g, but Snyder keeps us reading by pointing us toward possible solutions. She delves into how researcher­s and frontline intervener­s are creating practical, cost-effective, evidence-based ways to save lives.

The women’s stories are so common, they rarely rank as big news. Man kills family, self. Man kills ex-girlfriend or ex-wife. He kills her in her driveway, in her bedroom, in her office, with a gun, a knife, by strangling. And yet again a restrainin­g order didn’t protect her, the cops couldn’t get there in time, she did everything right — and still died.

Snyder shows how an individual act of private terror ripples outward, devastatin­g not just the immediate victim but families, friends and children. Family violence sends women and children into hospitals, homelessne­ss and intergener­ational cycles of trauma.

“No Visible Bruises” starts by taking us deeply into the family life of Rocky Mosure, Michelle Monson Mosure and their two small children. Although we know how it ends — man kills family, self — Snyder carries us through as if it were a detective novel, looking for answers to the question that bedevils us so often: Why didn’t Michelle take the kids and leave? The answer is, as it almost always is in family violence, that she feared her husband would kill her. Snyder shows how slowly but relentless­ly Rocky stifled Michelle’s life and corroded her will. A public health researcher and Rutgers professor, Evan Stark, calls this “coercive control,” a steadily escalating pattern of emotional abuse that involves taking over every decision in a woman’s life, controllin­g the money, isolating her from family and friends, monitoring her conversati­ons and movements, and eroding her confidence. We see Michelle taking painstakin­gly small steps toward freedom, earning her high school diploma and getting financial aid so she can go to college for a nursing degree in hopes of eventually supporting her children. Along the way she was trying not to get herself and the kids killed.

But when Michelle confronted Rocky — she took out a restrainin­g order and had him arrested for breaking into her mother’s house to take the kids — the legal system failed her. Rocky made bail and came home to put an end to them all. The book reveals where and how individual­s and agencies failed to share informatio­n, failed to recognize the danger.

Snyder also probes a central question: Why do men abuse and kill? Criminolog­y professor Neil Websdale argues that for some men who’ve been steeped in the idea that manhood involves control and strength, loving a woman offers the only conduit to a world of feeling that they have otherwise shut off. If he believes that she is his inner world and without her he will die, he is dependent on her. As Websdale puts it, abusers are powerful and powerless; they both have control and have none — except by controllin­g women.

Snyder embedded with abusers, allowing us to see the world through their eyes. Her research suggests crucial questions: Can men recover from an addiction to brutality and domination that’s so deeply socialized that it appears natural? Can they step back, examine and change their thinking? We learn that white middle-class and well-off men are most likely to commit familicide, which has increased in recent decades. Snyder says the country averaged about three cases a decade until the1990s, when there were 36; between 2000 and 2007, 60; between

2008 and 2013, it climbed to163, claiming 435 victims.

Snyder interviews Patrick O’Hanlon, a pseudonym for a man imprisoned after he murdered his family and tried to kill himself. He tells her about his childhood with a violent, alcoholic father and says his mother’s lack of respect for the man of the house caused his father’s rage — a clue that O’Hanlon will not take responsibi­lity for his own violence. He exhibits the characteri­stics of what researcher­s call the masculinis­t belief systems behind family violence. When he slid into financial ruin, he kept it secret from his wife and considered suicide. But he couldn’t stand the shame he’d feel at leaving his family destitute, so he tried to take them with him.

Still more fascinatin­g is the time Snyder spends with the pseudonymo­us Jimmy Espinoza, a former pimp and abuser who is trying to refrain from violence in part by training men in a program at the San Bruno, Calif., prison. The program’s graduates have 80 percent less recidivism than their peers in another wing of the prison who weren’t given the chance to participat­e. The program teaches men to examine how their gendered expectatio­ns warp their behavior and how to accept responsibi­lity for their violence, and introduces them to victims of similar violence. They discuss how their childhoods of violence and sexual abuse filled them with rage.

In the sessions, Jimmy tells stories of his deepest shame, saying he found vulnerable women and “stole their souls.” He unburdens himself to wrest insight out of his students.

One of Jimmy’s students realizes he was able to abuse his girlfriend­s in part by not calling them by their names: “By calling her a ----- all the time, what I was really doing was taking away her humanity.”

The book ends by examining the most important question: How do you interrupt abusive men’s escalation, saving their families’ lives? Here is Snyder’s hopeful answer: Small fixes make an enormous difference. Get agencies to share informatio­n. Keep records of every restrainin­g order, even expired. Teach cops, prosecutor­s, emergency room staff, domestic-violence advocates, judges and others to recognize the signs that a situation is escalating, and get the abuser behind bars. Create cross-disciplina­ry teams that share informatio­n and build protection­s around victims in particular danger. Use researcher­s’ lethality assessment checklists to assess when a man is likely to kill. For instance, public health researcher Jacquelyn Campbell has found that particular combinatio­ns of 22 risk factors — such as threats to kill, access to a gun, destructio­n of property, stalking, strangulat­ion, forced sex, and drug and alcohol abuse — can tell observers when a situation is especially dangerous.

Snyder takes us into the work of teams and police officers in Massachuse­tts, Montana, Cleveland; we watch as these and others find ways to intervene and keep women alive longer, to take the abuse seriously while it’s still a misdemeano­r and not a murder, to build systems that can house women and children without utterly disrupting their lives.

After a few chapters, I was telling a prosecutor friend that everyone in her office — no, everyone in the state who deals with family violence — had to read this book. Because it will save lives.

 ?? NBC ?? In 1984, “The Burning Bed,” an NBC TV movie, helped raise public awareness of domestic violence. Farrah Fawcett played Francine Hughes, who was repeatedly beaten by Mickey Hughes (portrayed by Paul Le Mat) while they were married and afterward. One night in 1977, he raped her; hours later, she set his bed afire. At her homicide trial, she was found not guilty by reason of insanity.
NBC In 1984, “The Burning Bed,” an NBC TV movie, helped raise public awareness of domestic violence. Farrah Fawcett played Francine Hughes, who was repeatedly beaten by Mickey Hughes (portrayed by Paul Le Mat) while they were married and afterward. One night in 1977, he raped her; hours later, she set his bed afire. At her homicide trial, she was found not guilty by reason of insanity.
 ??  ?? “NO VISIBLE BRUISES: What We Don’t Know About Domestic Violence Can Kill Us”
Rachel Louise Snyder
Bloomsbury. 307 pp. $28.
“NO VISIBLE BRUISES: What We Don’t Know About Domestic Violence Can Kill Us” Rachel Louise Snyder Bloomsbury. 307 pp. $28.

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