CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Answering critics of the "battered woman syndrome," a University of Illinois expert argues that the claims made by victims of domestic violence are a legitimate extension of the longstanding rules of self-defense.
Many dispute the notion that the legal protection of self-defense can be extended to a woman who kills a partner at some time other than during a beating. According to Alan M. Dershowitz, a Harvard law professor, a battered woman "has the option of either leaving or calling the police" rather than taking matters into her own hands.
Self-defense claims raised by battered women have encountered the greatest objections in cases in which a woman claims that a history of abuse led her to kill her partner as he slept or was not engaged in violence.
"Although statistically most domestic violence killings do not fall into this category," such killings raise the most troublesome questions for battered women claiming self-defense, wrote Kit Kinports, a law professor at the University of Illinois College of Law. "Can a woman who kills under these circumstances legitimately argue that she acted in self-defense - that, pursuant to the prevailing definition of the defense, she honestly and reasonably believed she was in imminent danger of danger or serious bodily harm?"
In an article in the Saint Louis University Public Law Review, Kinports goes through the legal questions raised by such cases. Critics, for example, charge that a battered woman cannot hope to satisfy the "reasonableness" requirement of the self-defense standard because her belief that force was necessary was objectively not reasonable.
Kinports argued that evidence of a history of beatings or chokings by a partner can provide an objective standard for evaluating a defendant's state of mind and her claim that she believed she was under a dire threat.
"The so-called 'reasonable battered woman' standard adopted by some courts is just a shorthand description for the conventional 'reasonable person under the circumstances' standard that courts apply in all self-defense cases," she wrote. In addition, the courts can evaluate through expert witnesses the growing body of empirical work about domestic violence and the "battered women syndrome," a term coined by psychologist Lenore Walker in 1979.
Focusing on the self-defense standard's "imminence" requirement, Kinports faults critics who argue that a woman who kills her partner while he is asleep cannot reasonably assert that she is in imminent danger. Kinports cites research finding that a woman sometimes can only realistically protect herself when the batterer is sleeping and, further, that leaving an abusive partner may subject her to even greater harm.
"At least half of the women who leave their abusers are followed and harassed or further attacked by them," she noted, citing figures indicating that the majority of men who kill their spouses do so after the couple has separated or divorced.
Calling the police, as Dershowitz suggested, is frequently futile under real-world conditions, according to Kinports. "At least half of protective orders against an abusive spouse are violated at least once, and many are violated repeatedly. The police are still much more likely to arrest in a case involving stranger assault and are reluctant to arrest unless the abuser committed some independent crime."
Likewise, requesting a court protective order can be especially risky for mothers, because state authorities are increasingly bringing neglect proceedings against women whose children witness family violence or are themselves victims of abuse.
A U.S. Department of Justice study in 2000 found that 85 percent of domestic assault cases involved men attacking women. The report estimated that 4.5 million male-on-female assaults take place yearly in the U.S, affecting 1.3 million women, resulting in an annual rate of 44.2 assaults per 1,000 women over the age of 17.
What's more, one in three female murders in 2001 was at the hands of the victim's husband or boyfriend, compared with one in 35 men killed by a wife or girlfriend, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reports.
While the proportion of women killed by their male intimates has stayed roughly the same between 1971 and 2001 (at the 31-33 percent level), the proportion of males killed by their wives or girlfriends has dropped from 7.8 percent in 1971 to 2.8 percent in 2001, according to the FBI reports.
"As our experience with 30 years of reform efforts has demonstrated, the gender bias that leads individual men to feel free to beat their partners - and that leads society to treat that violence more cavalierly than it treats stranger assault - is so well entrenched that it has proven very resistant to change," the Illinois scholar pointed out.
"Certainly while we continue our efforts to end violence against women, we should strive to give battered women's self-defense claims the same consideration we have traditionally afforded to defenses raised by male defendants."
Kinports' article is titled, "So Much Activity, So Little Change: A Reply to the Critics of Battered Women's Self-Defense."