October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Domestic violence is a
very real and significant problem in America. This month would be a good time
to address the attempt of state governments to combat domestic violence through
the issuance of temporary and permanent restraining orders.
In the wake of the attack on the World Trade Center and our nation�s
response to terrorism domestically and abroad, there has been a flurry of
negative reaction in the press to the subjecting of suspected terrorists to
trial by military tribunal without the constitutional protections afforded
other criminals. As John F. Kearney, III, put it in the March 24, 2003
issue of the New Jersey Lawyer, �All of us want as much done by government as
possible to protect us from more Sept. 11 attacks or worse. None of us wants to
be nuked, poisoned or fall victim to a suicide bomber. But none of us should
want, either, to give away our hard-won liberties.�
While the legitimacy of using military tribunals to try accused
terrorists is getting well-deserved attention, the media have been largely
silent on a related topic, the legitimacy of trying defendants accused of a
crime, domestic violence, in brief restraining order hearings in the family
court, where defendants are denied virtually all of the due process protections
afforded defendants in the criminal court. These systems have been in
effect much longer than the anti-terrorism measures, and affect many more
people, yet one hears very little about them.
Under New Jersey�s Prevention of Domestic Violence Act, for example, 10
days or less following the entering of a temporary restraining order (TRO), a
final restraining order (FRO) hearing is held. At the hearing, required by the
act to be a summary proceeding, a Chancery Division judge is authorized to make
a finding of fact by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant
committed an act of domestic violence, defined as one of 14 enumerated crimes
that include assault, burglary, rape and even murder. Having made such a
finding, the judge may bar the defendant from seeing his kids and from ever
setting foot in a particular house again, yet can make him pay the mortgage;
make him provide monetary support to the plaintiff; force him to see a
psychologist or psychiatrist at his own expense, who can in effect interrogate
him and then write a report to the judge that can be used against him in a
subsequent proceeding, such as a child visitation hearing; temporarily give the
plaintiff exclusive possession of the defendant�s car, checkbook, and other
personal effects (which could include a beloved pet); bar the defendant from
ever speaking to any individual that the plaintiff does not want him to speak
to (which could include a beloved friend or relative); force him to turn any
firearms he has into the hands of the proper authorities and bar him from ever
possessing another firearm in his life; and make the defendant pay a �civil
penalty� of $500. If the defendant does not comply with any aspect of the
judge�s order, he can be tried for contempt and imprisoned. Lastly, his name is
put on a list of domestic abusers known as the New Jersey Judiciary�s Domestic
Violence Central Registry.
The potential for abuse of the Prevention of Domestic Violence Act is
tremendous. A spouse willing to commit perjury can spend months or even years
with his or her lawyer planning to file a domestic violence complaint at an
opportune moment in order to gain the upper hand in a divorce proceeding and
preparing the presentation of his or her case, while an accused spouse is given
10 days or less to prepare a defense. Ten days is not nearly enough time to
prepare for an FRO hearing. It is not even enough time for most defendants to
fully understand the gravity of the situation they�re in. The lack of time is
compounded by the stress, alarm, and confusion caused by suddenly and without
warning being thrown out of their homes by armed law enforcement officers.
Imagine the following hypothetical scenario. Upon the initial
enforcement of a TRO, which was based on an allegation of physical abuse, a
husband/defendant is thrown out of his house without so much as a toothbrush.
He is allowed to take his wallet with him but is prohibited from taking his
checkbook because the police officers fear that he might maliciously exhaust
the marital assets. He isn�t given a place to shower or sleep, and only has
enough money in his wallet for a few meager meals. During this period, when his
main concerns are about his physical survival, he is told that there will be an
FRO hearing 10 days from the filing of the complaint. Having no legal
background, he has no inkling of the consequences of this hearing or of the
goings on of a courtroom. He has not been advised he has the right to have an
attorney represent him, and doesn�t realize he needs one. He couldn�t afford
one if he did, but he has no right, unlike a criminal defendant, to be provided
with free counsel. He arrives at court on the hearing day woefully unprepared,
tired, unshowered, unkempt, and disheveled.
During the hearing, our hypothetical plaintiff introduces hearsay and
alleges prior bad acts. Unfamiliar with the law, the defendant does not object
to the judge�s consideration of the improper evidence, but simply insists that
it�s untrue. He is surprised when she brings up events that were not alleged in
the complaint, and taken out of context and twisted so as to only be partially
true, the introduction of this evidence hurts his defense. He hasn�t thought of
these events for years and, caught off-guard, cannot articulate to the judge
what really happened.
After a few short hours of testimony, the judge declares that the
defendant committed the acts charged in the complaint, effectively labeling the
defendant a wife beater. He is forbidden from returning to the marital home and
from seeing his children, and is ordered to pay large sums of money
periodically to his wife. Since he could not afford an attorney for the FRO hearing,
he certainly cannot afford one for an appeal, and, not knowing the first thing
about the appellate process, does not appeal the ruling. He wants desperately
to see his children but he is baffled by the procedural labyrinth facing him
and doesn�t know what steps to take. At a subsequent proceeding regarding
visitation, he is instructed to attend and participate in counseling. The
court-appointed psychologist, having pre-judged him to be an abuser,
continually advises the court not to grant visitation. He does not know
when he will ever see his children again.
In 10 days, the hypothetical husband has gone from having a normal life
with a wife, children and home to being a social pariah, homeless, poor, and
alone, trapped in a Kafkaesque nightmare.
A report put out by RADAR (Respecting Accuracy in Domestic Abuse
Reporting), entitled �An
Epidemic of Civil Rights Abuses: Ranking of States� Domestic Violence Laws,�
ranks New Jersey�s domestic violence statute as one of the laws �most likely to
violate the civil rights of persons accused of domestic violence.�
Nevertheless, New Jersey�s statute is not an anomaly, as a review of the report
and another RADAR report, �Perverse
Incentives, False Allegations, and Forgotten Children,� reveals. Political
scientist Stephen Baskerville�s online report, �Family
Violence in America: The Truth about Domestic Violence and Child Abuse,�
makes it clear that false allegations of domestic violence and the legal system
that rewards them is not only a national problem, but an international one as
well. His book, Taken Into Custody: The War Against Fathers, Marriage, and
the Family, confirms this. Just
released by Cumberland House, it cites as an example of the national problem a
shocking statistic put out by the Department of Justice: �a restraining order
is issued every two minutes in Massachusetts.�
Big Media probably won�t report on the problem anytime soon. It�s
therefore up to bloggers, podcasters, and YouTubers to expose the due process
fiasco that media silence has allowed to persist.
Note: This article is an adaptation of David Heleniak�s Rutgers Law
Review article �The New
Star Chamber: The New Jersey Family Court and the Prevention of Domestic
Violence Act.�
David
Heleniak is a civil litigation attorney in New Jersey and Senior Legal Analyst
for the True Equality Network.