Woman, 64, Accused Of Assaulting Man, 72, With Car

Story here. Excerpt:

'David Gorn, 72, was leaving a diner Monday night when Harris allegedly confronted him and accused him of abusing a turtle.

Police later said it was a decorative item -- a porcelain turtle if you will that she claims was damaged.

But Harris' lawyer said it was an actual pet turtle.
...
Whatever the case, after the argument, cops said Harris grabbed his keys and took off in her car. Harris drove right next door to an adjacent parking lot and Gorn followed desperate to get his car keys back.

Cops said that's when she assaulted him with her Honda Accord, allegedly striking Gorn once, waiting for him to get up, and then hitting him again.
...
Harris' lawyer said she's ready to fight the assault charges.

"There's two sides to every story and she looks forward to telling her side," Seeger said.

Harris left court under orders not to contact the ex-boyfriend, who is recovering with a head injury.'

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Bridget's Law: Lies Without Consequences?

Article here. Excerpt:

'BRIDGET Marks says her nasty custody battle with a philandering ex-lover has transformed her from a buxom nude model into a full-blown political activist.
...
Last year, the former Playboy pin-up, now 43, got state Assemblyman Jonathan Bing and Sen. Tom Duane (both D-Manhattan) to craft "Bridget's Law," which protects parents from being penalized in custody cases for making "good-faith efforts" to protect their kids from child abuse. It was signed into law by Gov. Paterson.

"And with the help of Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney*, we'll have a national 'Bridget's Law' in the foreseeable future," Marks told us. "It's a silent national crisis of women losing their children for no good reason. I've been contacted by thousands of women from as far away as Australia."

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Grieving Parents Lose Thousands To Con Artist

Article here. Excerpt:

'Whether by disease, accident, murder or suicide, losing a child is one of the worst experiences a person could face. Another tragedy that ranks at the top of the list is having a missing child. Strangers abduct a small percentage of these children. Most are abducted by one of their parents.

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UK: Founder of women-only-as-employees company recounts results

Excellent article here, written by a female boss who thought it would be a good idea to set up an all female business... BIG mistake, as she now realizes. Excerpt:

'Over in one corner sat Alice, a strong-minded 27-year-old who always said what she thought, regardless of how much it might hurt someone else. In the other corner was Sarah, a thirtysomething high-flier who would stand up for herself momentarily - then burst into tears and run for the ladies.

Their simmering fight lasted hours, egged on by spectators taking sides and fuelling the anger. Sometimes other girls would join in, either heckling aggressively or huddling defensively in the toilets. It might sound like a scene from a tawdry reality show such as Big Brother, but the truth is a little more prosaic: it was just a normal morning in my office.

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Author of "Afraid to Go Home" gets Kindle distribution

Someone writing under the name Baden Hill has penned a book entitled "Afraid to Go Home", now for sale also on Amazon.com as a downloadable Kindle book. His (her?) stated reason for seeking to sell it as a Kindle book is because it may be that if an abusive husband caught his wife with the print version, it would probably lead to her being beat up (see the full second "press release" below). Excerpt from the first "press release":

'AFRAID TO GO HOME, a 420 page paperback, is about a White, middle-class, educated, female executive who is taken advantage of at work by the Good Ol' Boys, and is trapped in a violent relationship which she can't free herself and her children from at home.

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Oprah School Locked Up Students

Story here. Excerpt:

' FOUR students claim they were kept in solitary confinement for two weeks before being expelled from the Oprah Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa, amid allegations of sexual misconduct.

The girls, who were among seven pupils accused of forcing fellow students into sexual relationships and engaging in bullying and harassment, told a South African newspaper of how they were treated before being sent home.
...
A 15-year-old confirmed physical contact between students.

"If they say I was touching other learners, it's true," she told The Star.

In her defense, she said, "No one complained to me about it. Obviously if you touch someone, if they are uncomfortable, they will tell you."

On March 26, security guards told the girls to pack their things. They were each allowed monitored goodbyes with three friends for five minutes. Clothes, phones and shoes given to students by the school were taken back.'

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Murdered Man Victim Of Domestic Abuse

Story here. Excerpt:

'UNDATED -- A Sand Springs man, who was murdered last month, had been a battered spouse for years. When men are the victims of abuse, they rarely admit it, talk about it or get help and Jimmy Weaver's case ended in tragedy.
...
Jimmy's mother says he was a loving father and skilled carpenter, but developed a drinking problem and married a woman who had one of her own. Records show Deborah Weaver grew violent when she drank and often took it out on her husband and two young daughters.

Jimmy filed several protective orders against her over the years. Once he wrote, "she pushed me off the porch, then hit me in the mouth and pulled my hair."
...
Deborah Weaver was convicted in December of domestic violence on Jimmy and is in jail charged with killing Jimmy on March 26th. He'd been shot in the chest and his face had also been beaten.'

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Ireland: 'Feminists demand equality, but women and children come first'

Article here. Excerpt:

'If there is a coherent moral order to the present thoughts of the National Women's Council, it is that words no longer mean what they used to. In the Council's prospectus for the year 2009, the word "equality" is used 38 times. Yet clearly, in the sisters' deviant vocabulary, "equality" does not mean equality of pain, or hardship or suffering or poverty. No: it means the opposite of equality. It means a protection from these conditions, regardless of what men are enduring. In other words, lifeboat-feminism, surely the most ignoble and unprincipled of all the many liberal political creeds which dominate our ethos today.'

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Father's web site a good example

Web site here. "Dedicated to Madison Nicole Tenn" -- This man had his daughter abducted by her mother from their home and he hasn't seen her since.

This kind of site is important because not only does it raise the chance that the perpetrator will be caught and a father-and-child reunion will occur, but it also helps personalize the experiences of the people in question. It highlights the problem of under-enforcement of equal rights when the mother is the perpetrator and the father the victim in a parental child-abduction case such as this.

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Voices from the Grave, Betrayed by a Restraining Order

Article here. Excerpt:

'Debi Olson had three restraining orders taken out against her. But that didn’t stop the woman from ambushing ex-husband Mauricio Droguett in an Iowa shopping mall last July, fatally stabbing him in front of shocked mall-goers.

Toni Brown of Washington, DC was shot by former girlfriend Raina Johnson on August 12, 2008, leaving the woman paralyzed from her neck down. Johnson is currently serving a 28-year sentence for a crime the judge termed “extraordinarily brutal.” A restraining order had been previously issued against the assailant.

Karen Allende of New York City was walking to work on a September day in 2006 when she was attacked suddenly by her husband. She died that morning on the sidewalk, a restraining order folded neatly in her purse.
...
Judge Milton Raphaelson of Massachusetts once opined, “Few lives, if any, have been saved, but much harm, and possibly loss of lives, has come from the issuance of restraining orders and the arrests and conflicts ensuring therefrom.”

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Parental alienation syndrome leaves bruises deep inside

Article here. Excerpt:

'In the end, it was one tiny voice that silenced anyone who still had doubts that parental alienation is real and one of the most insidious forms of child abuse.

The voice wasn't real – Dashiell Hart opened his arms wide and threw himself off a Vancouver bridge eight years ago at the age of 16.

But his voice was brought to life at a Toronto conference by his devastated mother, Pamela Richardson, who endured a 12-year court battle with her ex-husband to try to win back the heart and mind of her son.

Dash was just one tiny soldier in the growing army of children who are becoming collateral damage in bitter battles between ex-spouses that are overwhelming Canada's divorce courts, the first Canadian Symposium for Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS) heard recently in Toronto'

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RADAR ALERT: Teed Off About Wasteful VAWA Spending? Have a Tea Party!

This April 15th citizens will gather at Tax Day TEA Party rallies in front of city halls all across the country to express their outrage at Congress' wasteful spending. (http://teapartyday.com/)

Like most of the population, the majority of attendees will never have heard of VAWA (the Violence Against Women Act), VOCA (the Victims of Crime Act), or FVPSA (the Family Violence Prevention and Services Act).

But unlike most of the population, this is a motivated group that would be outraged if they knew that through these acts, Congress squanders $1 billion of our tax dollars each year on domestic violence programs that don't solve the problem of domestic violence. And they'd be even more outraged to learn that what we actually get for our $1 billion per year are provisions – slipped into these laws under the radar without any debate – that undermine the very principles of justice that are an essential part of the foundation of any free society. What our annual $1 billion buys us is a heartless system that penalizes millions of innocent people each year, and does so with impunity.

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Canada: Sask. teacher charged with sexual assault of teen student

Story here. Excerpt:

'SASKATOON — A female teacher in northern Saskatchewan is charged with sexual assault after allegedly having a relationship with a 15-year-old male student.

Michelle Marie Francoeur, 37, is charged with one count each of sexual touching, sexual exploitation and sexual assault against the unnamed teen and will make her first court appearance Jan. 27 in Spiritwood, Sask. She was released from custody on an undertaking shortly after the charges were laid.

The charges stem from a Dec. 3 complaint stating Francoeur had an "inappropriate sexual relationship" with the boy between Sept. 1 and Nov. 30, 2008, according to an RCMP media release Friday.'

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UK: Estranged wife jailed for falsely accusing husband of sex attack

Story here. Excerpt:

'A man has told of the pain and humiliation he endured when his estranged wife falsely accused him of rape.

Anthony Scoones, 27, spoke out after Gemma Scoones was jailed for a year for perverting the course of justice.
...
His clothes were taken for forensic examination and he was left naked so that DNA samples could be taken. Mr Scoones said: 'I wasn't just stripped of my clothes, but of my dignity. I was stood there naked, with two police officers at one side of me and a doctor at the other side, having swabs taken from all over my body.
...
Durham Crown Court heard that she told police Mr Scoones followed her home from a shop, forced his way into the house and raped her in a downstairs toilet.

She claimed she was hurt but had not been able to call police immediately because he threatened to petrol-bomb her house.

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Submission for women to be able to provide video evidence in DV cases

In Australia, this story appears on the Sydney Morning Herald site. Except:

'POLICE should be able to use initial video evidence given by victims, rather than written statements, to better show in court the effects of domestic violence, an independent MP says.

Legally classing the victims as "vulnerable" would allow police to replace written statements with the raw video, Richard Torbay said as part of a campaign for his New England constituents who had been abused.

"This is something that I believe needs to be done if we are serious about domestic violence," he told the Herald.

The change could encourage perpetrators to plead guilty, avoiding the need for their victims to face them in court, experts said.'

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