Difference between revisions of "Family Violence"

Jump to navigation Jump to search
32 bytes added ,  05:21, 25 April 2013
m
Line 59: Line 59:
If you have suffered family violence, call the police; nothing will happen until you do. If there is evidence of abuse, the police can arrest the abuser and may take him or her into <span class="noglossary">custody</span>. To find out more, you may wish to read [http://resources.lss.bc.ca/pdfs/pubs/Surviving-Relationship-Violence-and-Abuse-eng.pdf Surviving Relationship Violence and Abuse ] and [http://www.lss.bc.ca/publications/pub.php?pub=379 Getting Help from the Police or RCMP].
If you have suffered family violence, call the police; nothing will happen until you do. If there is evidence of abuse, the police can arrest the abuser and may take him or her into <span class="noglossary">custody</span>. To find out more, you may wish to read [http://resources.lss.bc.ca/pdfs/pubs/Surviving-Relationship-Violence-and-Abuse-eng.pdf Surviving Relationship Violence and Abuse ] and [http://www.lss.bc.ca/publications/pub.php?pub=379 Getting Help from the Police or RCMP].


If the abuser is taken into custody, he or she will stay there until a judge is able to speak to him or her. Most of the time, he or she will be released from <span class="noglossary">custody</span> until the trial date following the <span class="noglossary">brief</span> hearing, and the <span class="noglossary">release</span> will be on specific terms and conditions set out in a document called a ''Recognizance'' or an ''Undertaking''.
If the abuser is taken into <span class="noglossary">custody</span>, he or she will stay there until a judge is able to speak to him or her. Most of the time, he or she will be released from <span class="noglossary">custody</span> until the trial date following the <span class="noglossary">brief</span> hearing, and the <span class="noglossary">release</span> will be on specific terms and conditions set out in a document called a ''Recognizance'' or an ''Undertaking''.


It's important that you call the police right away, or at least fairly soon after the violence. The police will sometimes refuse to take <span class="noglossary">action</span> against an abuser on the ground that the complaint was made out of malice or a desire for revenge because of the breakdown of the relationship.
It's important that you call the police right away, or at least fairly soon after the violence. The police will sometimes refuse to take <span class="noglossary">action</span> against an abuser on the ground that the complaint was made out of malice or a desire for revenge because of the breakdown of the relationship.
2,443

edits

Navigation menu