Domestic abuse victims say police not doing enough to protect them

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2023
  • 2.5 million adults, most of them women, are affected by domestic abuse every year. It's linked to one-in-five murders or manslaughter cases.
    (Subscribe: bit.ly/C4_News_Subscribe)
    Little wonder the government says it should be treated as a "national threat", on a par with terrorism.
    But what does that mean in reality? What happens when the person "terrorising" you is the man living in your home? Or someone you once loved who refuses to stop abusing you? How quickly do the police answer your call? What support is there to help you stay safe?
    In the first of a series of reports, we followed a small charity right on the frontline of Britain's Domestic Abuse crisis, and found the mechanisms to protect victims are too often failing them.
    There are details in this report you may find upsetting, and if you've been affected by any of the issues raised, you can get support and information from channel4.com/support
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Комментарии • 669

  • @ddjf3337
    @ddjf3337 6 месяцев назад +86

    At this point the question is who isn’t the system failing apart from the wealthy people of Britain.

    • @TheXantaur
      @TheXantaur 6 месяцев назад +4

      You guys need to learn from the French

    • @Sad_bumper_sticker.
      @Sad_bumper_sticker. 6 месяцев назад +9

      Wealthy wifes also are victims of domestic abuse by tie wearing high-powered job holding CEO husbands who are able to continue the abuse for decades without consequence.
      Domestic Abuse concerns women of all classes and financial circumstances.

  • @abbieroseholden4174
    @abbieroseholden4174 6 месяцев назад +56

    We need tougher punishments

  • @joanfregapane8683
    @joanfregapane8683 6 месяцев назад +187

    Isn’t harassing and causing property damage crimes in the UK? Why can the police not do something?

    • @Metonymy1979
      @Metonymy1979 6 месяцев назад +13

      They can't prove in court who did it. It's not easy to convict someone without evidence it was him.

    • @not_ever
      @not_ever 6 месяцев назад

      The entire legal system is broken and there is likely an undercurrent of systemic classism and misogyny.

    • @princevegeta1819
      @princevegeta1819 6 месяцев назад

      They fear being labelled as racists lol

    • @latifahegg-gg7ti
      @latifahegg-gg7ti 6 месяцев назад +55

      Because as well as expecting you to collect your own evidence and play detective, the police expect you to be the perfect victim. Which is impossible if you've been through trauma your bound to be flawed.

    • @2toneguy
      @2toneguy 6 месяцев назад

  • @Abbyrose22222
    @Abbyrose22222 5 месяцев назад +11

    My best friend took her own life last year after reaching out to the police on many occasions. she had multiple injuries which the police saw and all they did was give her an alarm and went on their way. She got attacked again and this time it was really bad and that was the last time she did. Beautiful young girl failed by the system. She needed protecting.

  • @sadikmeah4057
    @sadikmeah4057 6 месяцев назад +114

    I am a former police officer with GMP and I agree to some extent that the culture of the police service is not conducive to dealing with domestic violence issues. In many cases it is seen as a hindrance and officers like myself were encouraged, especially during peak times, to speed up the process which meant victims were not afforded satisfactory service. In some cases left to fend for themselves.
    I myself was challenged on numerous occasions when I spent too much time with victims, in some cases even accused of trying to avoid doing 'proper' police work.
    The problem is, like in any government organisation, there is a lack of accountability where even senior officers at the very top are more concerned about what the police service can do for them, IE pension, promotion etc, rather than for crime victims.

    • @fairy12324
      @fairy12324 6 месяцев назад +17

      Thank you for your honesty x

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +10

      Sir, it is very important that people who have served in the police speak out as you have just done. A brave action. I know some of your former colleagues would possibly take offence by you speaking out but since you have done it, others might follow your good example. It means more than you perhaps realise and I thank you on behalf of all survivors of DV. One of the early examples of violence I suffered as a young woman of around 18 springs to mind. I had been asleep with our young daughter, she was around a year old at the time. Later I had to called my father that evening as the baby was crying and crying and I couldn’t get her to settle. I had tried all the usual solutions but nothing seemed to comfort her. My partner was out drinking. My father suggested that perhaps her upset was due to me being so unsettled and he suggested I have a small glass of wine to relax and then she might also settle. I tried it and it worked. I was sat on the floor in front of the tv with my little glass of wine as my daughter played with her toys. She kept pulling at the glass as I drank it. She wanted to share, bless her. Obviously, I couldn’t allow that so I went and got an identical glass, filled it with apple juice and when she came back to me I held her glass of juice for her so she felt she was sharing with mummy. When we were finished I put the two, now empty glasses on the stone fireplace and off we went to bed. I remember waking abruptly as he returned in the early hours. That awful feeling of dread, what was coming next? I heard him go into the living room, switch the light on and paused for what felt like a very long time. The next thing I knew was him bursting into the bedroom, the light getting switched on and being bodily dragged out of bed. He manhandled me through to the living room and demanded to know who I had, had in the flat when he was out. And drinking wine with whoever he imagined had been there was obviously upsetting him. I tried to explain but he thought it was a story I had concocted and nothing I could say was resolving the situation. You can’t argue with a drunk person! Of course, things escalated and I was now standing in the corner of the room as he punched me repeatedly on the same spot on my arm demanding the truth. One of his favourite lines at that time was ‘you WILL fu%£ing cry’. Needless to say, no I didn’t but that, in hindsight, maybe wasn’t my smartest move but it is what I did. When he left the room briefly I called for help. The police came and there was a long conversation. On this one occasion I got the right policeman. My partner was told to sleep on the sofa and I was to return to my room with my daughter. Not liking being told what he could and couldn’t do in his own home and especially with me my partner began to argue. This policeman waited until his partner went to the hall to speak on his radio and then went down to my partners ear level as he was sitting. In a very quiet but determined tone he said ‘you WILL go to sleep on that sofa and you will NOT get back up until morning because if I have to come out here again tonight Sir, you and I are going to have a problem’ although my partner was clearly unhappy about being spoken to in this manner, his face all red with frustration, he was a great deal smaller than this policeman so reluctantly agreed. The policeman then spoke to me with kindness and told me to take myself and my daughter back to bed and put something in front of the door but should I have any further problems to call the police station and ask for him personally. My partner heard this clearly and there was no further problem that night. I have never forgotten that man’s kindness as it was one of the few times I experienced that kind of compassion. I do not remember his name, I wish I did but people never forget a kindness like that. I know he would quite probably have been ridiculed by his colleagues if I had, had to call them back out that night. He may have even gotten into trouble for it from his superiors. That is a man who was right for the job but they are very rare indeed.

    • @Mcfc2Rich
      @Mcfc2Rich 6 месяцев назад +7

      GMP aren't conducive to anything except traffic policing, sitting in town at 16:10 with a speed camera trying to bill those who pay their wages and anything else considered easy crime. Won't even answer their phones nvm visit you after a crime

    • @natasharalph866
      @natasharalph866 6 месяцев назад

      Can't be easy for you guys at all :(

    • @kevlyth1712
      @kevlyth1712 6 месяцев назад +7

      Joking aren’t ya. Police aren’t interested anymore unless they can make some money from it. Don’t attend burglary’s but will do road work all day long as that’s where the money is. Fines and impounding cars make them money. If they find an uninsured car they get to auction it off and take most of the profit.

  • @zzizahacallar
    @zzizahacallar 6 месяцев назад +61

    This is sad. I grew up in abuse by my brother; it changes you.

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +3

      Isn’t that the tragedy? It does change you and no amount of sorry’s will change things back to the way they were. You can’t un-ring a bell!

    • @hotsause123
      @hotsause123 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@DuchessCecelia72you could ring my bell?

  • @nickiw1979
    @nickiw1979 6 месяцев назад +31

    When I called South Yorks police a few weeks ago at 2am when my (now ex) was filming me in bed, the (trainee) officer and her partner left him in my house and just told us not to argue ! They have since apologised but he stole my car, house deeds & credit cards the next day ! They are not trained in narcissistic abuse

    • @mr.melontoyou
      @mr.melontoyou Месяц назад +1

      I’m so sorry that you went through this. The police have no idea what they’re doing. You are not alone!

    • @nickiw1979
      @nickiw1979 Месяц назад

      @@mr.melontoyou thank you 🙏 I agree, they at least admitted they got it wrong days later once the case got reviewed but that didn’t really help

  • @maigepresents5840
    @maigepresents5840 6 месяцев назад +22

    How is it that standing on a pavement recording a police station (a right, protected by law) gets a faster police response than repeated abuse of a human being?

  • @Nushka23
    @Nushka23 6 месяцев назад +110

    Funny, the language South Yorkshire police used. “I’m sorry you FEEL let down…”. I’m not sure apologising for someone’s emotions is an apology.

    • @garryleach767
      @garryleach767 6 месяцев назад +15

      Sounds like a lack of accountability from the police. I'm sorry you feel let down.

    • @Hiforest
      @Hiforest 6 месяцев назад +9

      It's probably what they are allowed to say. Admitting fault wouldn't be allowed (because then there's a record of them taking responsibility and makes sueing them easier).

    • @Zeoooooooo
      @Zeoooooooo 5 месяцев назад +1

      When someone says "I'm sorry you feel that way" it puts the guilt back on the persons feelings.

  • @originalunoriginal4055
    @originalunoriginal4055 6 месяцев назад +37

    The first case is clearly an issue of controlling and cohesive behaviour.
    The court found him guilty of stalking and assault by beating. Yet, release the violent individual back into the community by issuing a suspended sentence. You might as well issue a "not guilty" decision.

  • @Mary-po4ti
    @Mary-po4ti 6 месяцев назад +21

    She is terrified.
    Poor poor lady.
    She is high-risk.
    So sorry for her😢

  • @Nushka23
    @Nushka23 6 месяцев назад +143

    I was told by a female officer, despite having over 100 documents detailing historic abuse from an individual now perpetrating a campaign of harassment: “You’re not making any sense”, “You can’t even tell me one way in which you were abused”. Only when I stated I will contact a solicitor to see if they think differently did her attitude change. By then, I had no intention of communicating with her any further.

    • @marinamarley956
      @marinamarley956 6 месяцев назад +35

      They are worse than the abuser because they also have the legal powers

    • @tonyadams8812
      @tonyadams8812 6 месяцев назад +12

      I had the same issue with a next door neighbourwho lives in Hertfordshire . He got convicted of harassment ....after 17 years! Biggest C@nt you will ever meet

    • @Aza-yk8re
      @Aza-yk8re 6 месяцев назад +4

      Unless he put in jail they can't fully protect you one must take action to protect themselves the best way possible.

    • @Nushka23
      @Nushka23 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@marinamarley956 🎯 spot on.

    • @alfieaolomons6560
      @alfieaolomons6560 6 месяцев назад +1

      yes

  • @jasmines.6325
    @jasmines.6325 6 месяцев назад +40

    Once they have a restraining order they should have to wear an ankle bracelet that tracks their movements

  • @flowerpower7288
    @flowerpower7288 6 месяцев назад +34

    When i was standing in bits of plaster and hugging my terrified 10-year-old child after an ex smashed up my room, the first thing the police asked me was whether i really thought it was a crime, because for some people this was just normal.... wtf??!! They are so complicit with the abusers and normalising, minimising and belittling of abuse.

    • @LillithVexx
      @LillithVexx 6 месяцев назад +4

      I was called over dramatic, hysterical and told that him r-ping me must've been something I'd agreed to - I was left to fend for myself at the start of lockdown, Thank goodness I managed to get out of there without police or council help in the end. I hope you and your son are okay x

    • @flowerpower7288
      @flowerpower7288 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah, we're okay now thanks, he sent a couple of death threats after (police did nothing again) but that was a couple of years ago. Last I heard he was homeless 😕 system failed us both.

    • @JamaicanToast
      @JamaicanToast 6 месяцев назад

      Was the ex in question the father of your child?

    • @flowerpower7288
      @flowerpower7288 6 месяцев назад

      Thankfully not. But he is the father of 2 younger children.

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@LillithVexx you poor woman, it angers me beyond belief that what you described you went through is given so little understanding. To the point that in this country 1 in 3 women have suffered some form of sexual abuse or harassment. In what universe is that an acceptable situation? You are clearly a very strong and capable lady. I hope things are much better for you now and I pray that the opportunity will present itself in the future where this person will be forced to accept responsibility for their actions. Much love xx

  • @w.urlitzer1869
    @w.urlitzer1869 6 месяцев назад +30

    the police should be sued every time they ignore these victims. they are effectively complicit in crime. imagine to have to fear for your life daily.

    • @v.j.bartlett
      @v.j.bartlett 6 месяцев назад +1

      What I had to go through in High School, every day I was afraid that today was the day they were going to r*** me til I bled. The teacher's attitudes? I needed to learn to take a joke.

    • @Bringon-dw8dx
      @Bringon-dw8dx 6 месяцев назад

      Define ‘ignore’.
      I know police working in DV. They have too many cases. They often get emails saying ‘have you looked into x yet’ but they just haven’t had the time due to the number of cases each officer has to carry and investigate. They aren’t intentionally ignoring people, they just don’t have the time

  • @maxpaws3977
    @maxpaws3977 6 месяцев назад +12

    I know a woman who was harassed by a Police officer for 7 years with the police service basically telling her to f off after all her complaints to them. Only after covert filming and a letter of claim to that UK police force did it finally stop. But that didn't effect that police officers job, he's now a sergeant today.

  • @gedia8568
    @gedia8568 6 месяцев назад +48

    Yet the police will quickly arrest you for swearing at them .😢😢

    • @Christinebanks11
      @Christinebanks11 6 месяцев назад +3

      No first amendment. 🇺🇸

    • @candyman5912
      @candyman5912 6 месяцев назад +1

      Don't swear at them then

    • @gedia8568
      @gedia8568 6 месяцев назад +4

      @candyman5912 lol if they have time for that why not help people who are facing this much abuse... I bet you fed 😏

    • @kahyui2486
      @kahyui2486 6 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@candyman5912people have the right express themselves how they want especially in moments of high emotions. Unless a member of public complains about swearing in public then the police should frankly grow up. Wasting taxpayers money on naughty words.
      A few years back even the head of the met police sent a warning out saying to all police and newbies "do not sign up for the force if you can't handle some swear words".
      Pathetic, grow up.

    • @TheXantaur
      @TheXantaur 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@Christinebanks11GOD BLESS AMERICA, THE LAND OF THE FREE AND HOME OF THE BRAVE

  • @pppp67567
    @pppp67567 6 месяцев назад +99

    I found the Police unreliable and untrustworthy in my own harrassment and stalking case. It was extremely depressing. I understand why people say not to trust the Police now. They protect those they think are like them despite those people being abusers. Admitals and evidence don't change that either.

    • @betterwithwinebetterwithwi2359
      @betterwithwinebetterwithwi2359 6 месяцев назад +4

      Unreliable and untrustworthy I felt that😢

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +10

      It is truly sad that both myself and my adult daughters would never consider calling the police in such circumstances. They would be the last people I’d contact. In most cases they made things worse.

  • @thomasanders1314
    @thomasanders1314 6 месяцев назад +27

    Poverty exposes the most vulnerable.

  • @flowerpower7288
    @flowerpower7288 6 месяцев назад +16

    FYI: According to a freedom of information request to the metropolitan police, of the 95,000 reported cases of domestic abuse in 2021 only 50 were deemed to be false. That's about 0.05%.

    • @numerouno2532
      @numerouno2532 6 месяцев назад

      lol maybe you should ask them how many of the 95,000 were actually guilty. Do you think they're going to say 94,950? of course the 50 number is meaningless, ask them how do they count the false allegations? they have almost no idea which allegations are false and which aren't. Most of them they'll say we don't know who is telling the truth. do you think they're going to admit to so many false arrests? Did they prosecute 94,950 people?

  • @Kiki-yw9kc
    @Kiki-yw9kc 6 месяцев назад +12

    It’s a dark place to be in , I am currently living a life of misery due to my abusive husband of 23 years

    • @LillithVexx
      @LillithVexx 6 месяцев назад +8

      I hope you find a way out safely

    • @Zeoooooooo
      @Zeoooooooo 5 месяцев назад +1

      Are you in the UK?

  • @SnackAttack6
    @SnackAttack6 6 месяцев назад +15

    I grew up in DV and it traumatised me for life, I’m 62 now, 2 failed marriages due to DV and nothing has changed with the attitude of the police or law

    • @tomh6588
      @tomh6588 6 месяцев назад

      @D-jj5dy There are +60 million people in the UK. It's safe to say the vast majority are not committing abuse on their partners. Sorry to think you had some horrid past experiences but thought it might help to put some perspective into the mix.

    • @SnackAttack6
      @SnackAttack6 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@tomh6588 the subject is about DV, not the +60 million who are happy with their partners, think you watching the wrong video mate

    • @tomh6588
      @tomh6588 6 месяцев назад

      I was replying to D-jj5dy's guidance to stay SINGLE. As if all relationships are abusive, which is obviously not the case.@@SnackAttack6

    • @meahdahlgren5875
      @meahdahlgren5875 6 месяцев назад

      ​@D-jj5dyright

  • @kokodizzle2964
    @kokodizzle2964 6 месяцев назад +14

    I was repeatedly assaulted by my mother’s tenants son. The police would arrest him then the detectives would release him and allow him back into the property I was staying out with
    No further action. One incident when he grabbed my wrists and punched me I had footage of it I showed it to the police and they were like we don’t have an available van to arrest him.

  • @bonariablackie4047
    @bonariablackie4047 6 месяцев назад +32

    I want to notify domestic abuse survivors of some important information. If you are suffering from abuse, or have escaped and are still harrassed by your abuser, it is very important you notify the police of every single event, even if the police do nothing. The reason is that, you can go to your local council Housing Aid department, tell them what is happening and to ask the police for the evidence and you WILL be able to move to another area, regardless of whether you have a local connection or not. I would also suggest keeping a diary with dates and what happened and take photographs of any smashed windows etc as evidence you can supply straight away. You can move to any area you want, but you can only move away once. After that, you would need a local connection to any area you want to move to. So go to your local Housing Aid department without delay.

    • @livelife5947
      @livelife5947 6 месяцев назад +10

      Yes you’re right, brilliant advice. Documenting absolutely everything & gathering as much evidence as possible is vital. Thank you 👍

    • @flowerpower7288
      @flowerpower7288 6 месяцев назад +6

      Totally agree 👍

    • @donahboddami
      @donahboddami 5 месяцев назад

      Whilst not a domestic abuse situation I have been a target of Stalking & Anti social behaviour from a neighbour with evidence. Police assured me it was serious after an incident in august after it began in feb when moved here. I reluctantlyi ended up calling them out as I have little faith in criminal justice or the police in situations like this.
      I had been in a women's refuge many years ago & was appalled at attitudes & stigmas & that police saw victims as burdens. There is a very sick culture we have in the UK of "must of deserved it" "this happens to everyone" or you are not believed & it is filtered throughout. We still live in the dark ages.
      I was accepted for housing after months of desperately looking privately but it didn't mention I was accepted or priority for this reason.
      Police hadn't been in touch Other than answer messages after giving them updates & although I had given more evidence they had still not got round to speaking/arresting him. He listens in at my bedroom window ffs.
      I was advised to apply for a grant for help with home items to which I was interrogated by the decision maker who contacted the police as he did not want to consider me for a grant at all.
      The police then contacted me as they had not spoke to me since they were called out back in August. Told twice by an officer over the phone that there were more horrific crimes being dealt with.
      I told them I understand but know that if I feel threatened in person I will protect myself by any means necessary.
      Told not to do anything stupid.
      It won't be anything stupid trust me. It's stupid that we have laws that do not protect people and they die whilst these no self control having people can do what they like with no consequences to their actions!
      The police have not spoken to him yet about it. Told me they were going to speak to him the other night & Ib told them to wait until I've moved now as I do not trust he wont react as they are not going to arrest simply tell him he can't come near me or he'll be arrested Crazy laws.
      I move this week. Whilst this is a minor in comparison the experience had left me hypervigilant feeling unsafe in my home. Domestic abuse & stalking should be a priority police & community issue.
      I'm still baffled how a criminal can stay in the home he/she did the crime while the victim of the crime is put into a refuge. My situation was not a partner but a family member who attacked me in my sleep & I ended up in a refuge. I said it back then, why am I in here & not my home. The criminals should have to go to a flippin refuge or prison whatever. Even the process of keeping "victims" safe is full of faults & causes degradation of wellbeing. Children are uprooted from homes whilst the criminal lives as normal?!!@
      Make it make sense

  • @mazybee9149
    @mazybee9149 6 месяцев назад +18

    The local police in my area take selfies outside housing estates to say they hit their targets of checking in on vulnerable people and publish them to social media, not realising that some might be vulnerable or the domestic abuse group. I had to point it out to councillors the impact that could have on a person's safety and security. They are inequipped, they do these one day training courses to tick a box and think that's it, don't become officers if you cannot be bothered to invest your time to help us. The lack of education they have is astounding too. They don't even have emotional literacy. Its survivors who are going into to train these officers and even doctor surgeries. Glad this raises awareness as it's about time. The cps has a threshold of what constitutes domestic abuse crime, they ask for email trails and no face to face meetings so how do they know it reaches the limit? I could go on...terrible justice system 😪

  • @user-db6wv4rd9m
    @user-db6wv4rd9m 6 месяцев назад +19

    Yes. And it has failed them for centuries.

  • @Cocomoon28
    @Cocomoon28 5 месяцев назад +21

    I'm a domestic abuse survivor and during that dark time, the police were awful. Not only did they victim blame, they also threatened to call social services on me which meant I was then too scared to call them again the next time he broke into my house whilst we were all sleeping to force me to take him back which I then did. I eventually escaped by fleeing abroad with my two children and our whole life whittled down to 2 suitcases. He literally drove around Europe in my footsteps to look for me putting up "missing posters" with our photos on. That's how difficult it was to escape, no thanks to the police. Unfortunately all my dealings with the police as a victim has made me loose not only faith but trust in them. Most of the officers seemed to be rude, haughty and arrogant with no compassion or integrity to plain abuse of power from what I have experienced unfortunately.

    • @user-iz6sp6pe1r
      @user-iz6sp6pe1r 2 месяца назад

      My experience also, back in the day felt the police were racist because I'm not white, speak broken English and The women police have no sympathy for me like I deserved to it or something.

    • @mr.melontoyou
      @mr.melontoyou Месяц назад

      Yes they victim blame the cop who spoke to me called me didn’t even take a statement from me spoke to me so rudely and condescendingly and told me what my ex had said to me which I’d heard from my ex whilst we was abusing me. So, the cop re- traumatised me! Blaming me for him abusing me that it was my fault. Which is what my ex did! Blamed me!

  • @XxTheAwokenOnexX
    @XxTheAwokenOnexX 6 месяцев назад +9

    UK police have an appalling record on not investigating serious domestic, or sexual based crimes, especially against minors!

  • @legomovieman2
    @legomovieman2 6 месяцев назад +52

    We ask why don't the police do anything, yet never ask the question, why are WE the people not allowed to defend ourselves?

    • @Christinebanks11
      @Christinebanks11 6 месяцев назад +4

      Come to the light . 🇺🇸😆

    • @wc8246
      @wc8246 6 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@Christinebanks11nah we've seen what happens in your schools mate xD

    • @Bringon-dw8dx
      @Bringon-dw8dx 6 месяцев назад +1

      We are…

    • @mahoganysoul1798
      @mahoganysoul1798 6 месяцев назад

      @@Christinebanks11 the light? You can’t even go to the supermarket or school without a possible mass shooting. Domestic abuse victims are also getting shot in America….

    • @meahdahlgren5875
      @meahdahlgren5875 6 месяцев назад

      Legomovieman2 right

  • @bub8002
    @bub8002 6 месяцев назад +16

    Financial abuse is also rife thanks to the genius move the make one person receive a couples joint claim, making it even harder for people being abused to leave

    • @flowerpower7288
      @flowerpower7288 6 месяцев назад +5

      Hard to leave a financially abusive partner when they have all the control and money. I wasn't eligible for legal aid because of HIS income...lol

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +3

      This is the point though isn’t it? The general public, even the police, don’t realise how complex the issue can become. When the abuser spends so much time considering their options and how to prevent the victim from having more control over their own life or finding a way to get out of the situation, the issues become impossible for the victim to unravel. Very often the victim doesn’t even realise there is a problem while the whole time the abuser is putting things in place behind their partners back so by the time the victim realises they are in trouble, they are already trapped. There needs to be actual University or College courses on this subject, it’s that complex!

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 5 месяцев назад

      This has always been the Tory parties way of thinking and you are absolutely right. This plays right into the hands of any abuser. Financial abuse is a key component in their abusive controlling tool kit. But, with any luck a new government will come in and change it all back. It is a revolving door I’m afraid.

  • @jadeluna773
    @jadeluna773 6 месяцев назад +13

    They release these monsters, they and they keep offending. Too many women and children are being traumatised.

    • @jadeluna773
      @jadeluna773 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@richardshortall5987 and men. But mostly women.

    • @mr.melontoyou
      @mr.melontoyou Месяц назад

      And murdered. 😢 my heart is broken.😞

  • @railwaychristina3192
    @railwaychristina3192 6 месяцев назад +6

    I am a probation officer and deal with DV abusers ..some of whom have been given 3 or 4 community orders for violence against their victims before a judge reluctantly gives them a 9 week jail sentence. A rapist of a 15 year old given unpaid work....it goes on.

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +1

      I cannot imagine the frustration you must have dealing with this day in and day out. I certainly couldn’t do what you do.

  • @bigsmoke4568
    @bigsmoke4568 6 месяцев назад +12

    The system is failing pretty much everyone these days

    • @bigsmoke4568
      @bigsmoke4568 6 месяцев назад

      @@D-jj5dy What are you on about? When did I say they were lying?

  • @DuchessCecelia72
    @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +123

    I am a survivor of domestic abuse, stalking, harassment and controlling behaviour for 32 years. I can completely understand how this young woman feels. I sympathise completely and I can concur that her experience is real. The police did nothing in my case either and in fact even told my abuser where I was hiding on one occasion. It took me moving out of the area to finally get free of it. He tried to follow me but thankfully he couldn’t get close enough to really affect my life in any real way anymore. I had hoped things had improved for victims and their children but it looks like things are going backwards again. So disappointing. A labour government did more but even that didn’t go far enough. How many women have to die before someone does something?

    • @moa3605
      @moa3605 6 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@johnwood-stoddard4600 who are you to judge someone who experienced abuse.
      Use the little brain left,and have empathy

    • @nothanks1239
      @nothanks1239 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@johnwood-stoddard4600 This makes me think you are an abuser. Making excuses for abusers. You're projecting. Get some help and quit being a waste of oxygen.

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +11

      @@johnwood-stoddard4600 how dare you, you know nothing about me. It seems to me you are the one projecting your bullshit onto others. Which tells the world a great deal more about you than it does about me. I have never deliberately hurt anyone in my life. Can you say the same?

    • @natasharalph866
      @natasharalph866 6 месяцев назад +9

      I felt those words when you said they told him where you was. It happened to me too and I understand how scary it is 😢

    • @nothanks1239
      @nothanks1239 6 месяцев назад

      @@DuchessCecelia72 lol looks he deleted his comment. What an absolute pleb. Don't let these cretins get to you.

  • @josephineayebare2315
    @josephineayebare2315 6 месяцев назад +9

    It's absurd that there's no support for victims after the court. They continue to face stalking, harassment. It seems like a punishment to the victims that lasts .. And the stigma that comes with it is unbelievable. Sometimes when a victim reports to police about stalking incidents, the response is call us when you see someone at your door! ....

  • @livelife5947
    @livelife5947 6 месяцев назад +42

    If you’re a woman experiencing DV & you call the police for help, truth is the police are more likely to arrest you than your abuser. If your abuser gets injured while attacking you or you fight back & he gets injured while attacking you, the police will arrest & charge you. According to the police officers & lawyers I’ve spoken to about this, You’ve got zero right to defend yourself. You’re expected to call the police while you’re being attacked, wait for the police to turn up & hope you’re not murked in the meantime. Oh & my favourite, when the abuser is in *YOUR HOME* & won’t leave, if you call the police, they’ll probably make up some excuse to arrest you like “disturbing the peace” & call social services for your kids if you have any. If you’re concussed after an assault (which you most likely will be) officers will use the opportunity to get you to sign a false confession. They’re also known for ignoring medical requests from DV victims in custody.
    I’m speaking from experience btw. Just be warned ladies, DV is no joke & the police will NOT help you, they’re more likely to help your abuser. Most of them are total misogynists & that includes the female officers, they’ll almost always take the man’s side over yours. However there are many absolutely fantastic charity organisations that can help you with advise, legal matters, housing & counselling.

    • @flowerpower7288
      @flowerpower7288 6 месяцев назад +4

      I did call the police during an attack. I was physically assaulted and he was punching holes in my walls whilst I was on the call, my kids were terrified. Thankfully he left. But he later tried to suggest I had pushed him, I was told I wasn't being prosecuted because he'd caused criminal damage and assault first so it was therefore reasonable for me to try to get him to leave my home!! (P.s I didn't touch him anyway, he was 6ft and scary af)

    • @James_Doyle83
      @James_Doyle83 6 месяцев назад

      Goes both ways men need to be warned too with violent women and if you don't believe me there are many evil women out there including Lucy letby who killed babies

    • @tomh6588
      @tomh6588 6 месяцев назад +5

      What happens to men that are victims of DV? Serious question.

    • @ursulasmith6402
      @ursulasmith6402 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@tomh6588That doesn't exist.

    • @tomh6588
      @tomh6588 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@ursulasmith6402 lol ok..

  • @angelwitchywildingrocco
    @angelwitchywildingrocco 6 месяцев назад +21

    Ive survived 1 relationship like that....glad to say nobody controls me now😊 and knowing the signs of a narcissistic person and personality does help a person come to terms with how the victim feels because the perpetrator has no empathy for anything or anybody....🙄 i did a course about it and it didn't happen again❤

    • @angelwitchywildingrocco
      @angelwitchywildingrocco 6 месяцев назад +3

      My ex is dead now and has been since 2012 so end of that💩🙊

  • @gbalcombe
    @gbalcombe 6 месяцев назад +7

    Completely agree. I lost my stepmum to my "dad" due to incompetence of the services. He used to beat my mum, and has been inside for 17 years now. The effect it has had on us children is horrid and it's overlooked completely. I've had almost no support from the services and none at all through the police.. I recently applied to CICA, but that has been refused as I need to prove my stepmum was a parental figure, even though I'd lived with them both for 5+ years and she loved me like a son as I did a 2nd mum. She arranged for me to move bk with my mum as she believed Pewsey was a bad place and I would have a better life with mum... 6 weeks later he strangled her... Another thing that would require "extensive investigation, that I lived with them, as I was told.... Basically prove it matters..I miss her everyday, and feel shame and guilt. But I'm no one to anyone. Another lost soul waiting for death

    • @Cocomoon28
      @Cocomoon28 5 месяцев назад

      So sorry for your loss and that you didn't get the help or support you clearly needed. You should not feel shame or guilt for something that was not your fault. Please reach out to someone if you feel like you cannot cope. I hope you find some peace in your life soon.

  • @JodieTarot
    @JodieTarot 6 месяцев назад +9

    After having attended court twice to gain 2 restraining orders for 2 offenders.. it made no difference whatsoever. So after going through the emotional turmoil of court for the orders to hold 0% power.. what's the point.
    If you're facing abuse.. stay strong & stay away from them. I'm a survivor!!!
    #loveshouldnthurt 💜

  • @hayleydoherty9557
    @hayleydoherty9557 6 месяцев назад +4

    Hide her name but show where she lives and enough of her to recognise and definitely be able to identity her from her voice, crazy

  • @eleanorwalmsley635
    @eleanorwalmsley635 6 месяцев назад +7

    I despair of Britain

  • @JD-te6vm
    @JD-te6vm 6 месяцев назад +13

    Sad circumstances. From a man speaking, I say Protect women!

  • @StarSurvivor1585
    @StarSurvivor1585 6 месяцев назад +7

    Worked in DV for my Bachelor's degree at a DV Shelter. What seems to be the major legal loophole is until the Restraining Order gets VIOLATED, nothing can be done. The most dangerous time is which DV victims leave. They are in the MOST danger leaving. As a victim of being stalked myself it took MANY MANY TIMES for Dude to finally stop. He was put in the Hospital for psychosis and it finally stopped

    • @LillithVexx
      @LillithVexx 6 месяцев назад +2

      This is true - I managed to escape almost 4 years ago now and mmy abuser is still posting about me and trying to find me (I find out at random times when people message me or see me around, letting me know they've heard or seen things about me from him) it never ends.

    • @Cocomoon28
      @Cocomoon28 5 месяцев назад +1

      Mine took about 4 years to completely go away, I was getting police raids even though he didn't know my address for years afterwards every so often when he'd call up the police and make some outlandish story to them, to the point where I told them he's harassing me through you can you not see as it's an "annoymous" caller and they don't even have my address and yet you all still make a big scene banging down my door at stupid hours with 3 police cars and countless officers over fake calls! I was being terrorised through the police, which makes a mockery of the system. The last time he called them he told them he had murdered me, of course another scene as ofc they thought they were finding a body but thankfully that was the last it happened which was a couple of years ago now so it does stop eventually.

  • @sylviaball3874
    @sylviaball3874 6 месяцев назад +16

    Police not doing anything for anyone

  • @samanthahardy9903
    @samanthahardy9903 5 месяцев назад +2

    It also doesn't help when local councils place "women at risk" in accommodation in the same area as the abuser!

  • @James_Doyle83
    @James_Doyle83 6 месяцев назад +4

    I hope people know domestic violence goes both ways not just men against women as men can be in a domestic relationship too

  • @siaosigreen4126
    @siaosigreen4126 5 месяцев назад +1

    imagine getting your windows smashed by a man who rides a kids bike.

  • @emmafletcher9189
    @emmafletcher9189 5 месяцев назад +2

    I'm sorry but her face when she was asked about the home secretary showed that the government won't do anything.

  • @aafiaturkey6748
    @aafiaturkey6748 6 месяцев назад +2

    Kier Starmer must be so proud with the reduction in prosecution, given he was previously in charge of the CPS

  • @jotheakston2405
    @jotheakston2405 6 месяцев назад +2

    The pr**k on a mini bike! Sad “man”!

  • @karenm2669
    @karenm2669 6 месяцев назад +5

    All of these prevention, law enforcement and prosecution measures rely on one gigantic assumption: that the ranks of those making the laws, enforcing the laws and prosecuting the perpetrators don’t contain a hefty number of people who are perpetrators of domestic violence themselves, hard-wired to downplay its seriousness & trivialize its effects on the victim. As anyone who’s lived this experience, or who has studied it longer than five minutes knows, domestic abusers exist in every profession and at every socio-economic level. Every woman who calls the police, every woman who decides to prosecute is risking her life. If he gets off too lightly, he will decide SHE victimized HIM, and he will escalate the abuse. We saw it happen publicly with Gabby Petito in the US. It happens in private all over the world, every single day.

  • @loobygee1794
    @loobygee1794 6 месяцев назад +5

    Most of the perpetrators are police

  • @bethany5450
    @bethany5450 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve called the cops twice about my toxic abusive stalking ex and they didn’t care at all. They didn’t care at all that he was beating on me and told me to just go get a restraining order which would cost me $300-$400 dollars 😐 but if I were to protect myself, I’m sure I’d end up going to jail for it. Jeez.

  • @sylviaball3874
    @sylviaball3874 6 месяцев назад +6

    This is why there is so much crime. They know nothing will be done about it.

  • @Alice-pk9yc
    @Alice-pk9yc 6 месяцев назад +2

    My lawyer who kindly charged me nothing for her advice told me to get the police to take the harassment I was getting seriously I had to document everything which made sense. However, she also said that to approach the police I had to be strategic to actually have them take it seriously. When you’re in the midst of brain frog and stress and anxiety you don’t have the mental space to think about how you need to tell the police! You need the police to protect you.

  • @yokomotooto1255
    @yokomotooto1255 6 месяцев назад +3

    It says more about society than the police.

  • @abbieroseholden4174
    @abbieroseholden4174 6 месяцев назад +17

    And yes we all know Domestic abuse is both genders. It is really frightening that the victims get stalked and harrased that much they think they will die 😢😢😢

    • @mahoganysoul1798
      @mahoganysoul1798 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah, and we also know who the main perpetrators are.

  • @drumnbassdan
    @drumnbassdan 6 месяцев назад +2

    Yes, as a Male victim i feel nothing gets done, the police make you feel like the aggressor, they always assumed it was me that was the one dishing the violence and aggression, never came to the house open minded, after 11 years the final straw came when my partner decked me over and over in the head in front of our kids and i was eventually knocked unconscious, my eldest bless her called the police and her mum, my partner did a runner... me and the kids just left the house. Now 3 years on, my kids live with her and her Boyfriend she was cheating on me with and its just violence at that house all over again, i have nothing, i get put low down the list for housing (if i was female i doubt id be so low down) i see my kids only 2 days a fortnight, life is hard and horrible and absolutly non of my own doing. Men, speak up, dont be afraid of what people think, like i did.

  • @khadijahb3318
    @khadijahb3318 6 месяцев назад +3

    The problem is the current system is not addressing the perpretators behaviour. A protective order alone is not sufficient especially if its applied & monitored. I know funding is an issue but its not good enough to simply expect these women to just keep moving around & living in fear. The current judicial system need serious reform.

  • @sharonellis8776
    @sharonellis8776 5 месяцев назад +1

    I have never regretted leaving an abusive partner. Now I live alone which is much better. xx

  • @n0thersist3r
    @n0thersist3r 6 месяцев назад +2

    Yes they're not. After I was assaulted they just told me to save up and move out. I'm disabled, mentally ill with chronic pains. A year later assaulted again, that is when they finally arrested him. I still have a painful back from being pushed into an object 3 years ago.

  • @MissM.789
    @MissM.789 5 месяцев назад

    Had a friend be told by the police she didn't "look like a victim"

  • @knicol46
    @knicol46 5 месяцев назад +2

    The moment your parnter is abusive towards you is when you have to decide is it worth staying together.

  • @Angelseverywhere
    @Angelseverywhere 6 месяцев назад +2

    All the police officer that have been there for years needs to be sacked

  • @jimrford
    @jimrford 6 месяцев назад +1

    The system is just out and out broken.

  • @lynndenver7588
    @lynndenver7588 3 месяца назад

    Am in Northern Ireland, i went today for Restraing order with 13 yrs of Continuous Abusive behaviour to date and ongoing every week abuse, i am high risk , had reports police records everything. Was in court 15 mins and told no to an order 🤷‍♀️

  • @kenrie20022
    @kenrie20022 6 месяцев назад +1

    Several Property damage crimes were reported to the police in my area. The police did not bother to investigate the crime despite cctv evidence.

  • @QueenGinax
    @QueenGinax 6 месяцев назад +3

    Not just the police THE LAW!!!! Judges!

  • @barrymac4431
    @barrymac4431 5 месяцев назад +1

    Domestic abuse is men and women and not just women who are attacked

  • @kalelake3067
    @kalelake3067 6 месяцев назад

    Really horrible; please help this young lady.. ☮️💜

  • @madib790
    @madib790 6 месяцев назад +1

    Nothing was done about my Non British ex who was abusive even though i sent evidence and a detailed email to the home office. Unfortunately he is still living in england- im not sure how, maybe as a student or on a work visas. This person married me and thought i was a shy timid 21 year old who would put up with his abuse but, i broke the cycle of abuse regadless of having no support from my family. The minimum i would have expected is for the government to not allow him in the country... i did not recieve replies from the police or home office.

  • @illtumbleforya
    @illtumbleforya 5 месяцев назад

    My ex breached every police restraining order and court restraining order within days and sometimes on the same day he was given it. It took them weeks to find him but he kept turning up and terrorising me at my house. He was given 12 weeks suspended sentence so was free to roam and continue terrorising me. Eventually he got sentenced to 9 months in prison for breach of restraining order (not for putting me in hospital) and he only did 4. He was also ordered to pay £100 to myself which was offensive to say that I am left with the mental scars for life. I see him regularly as I think he is living in my area and I am still scared of him. I feel very let down by the court and justice system. My life will never be the same.

  • @lindseymiller7866
    @lindseymiller7866 6 месяцев назад +1

    Been in this situation police refuse to help unless physical harm is caused

  • @Sonyrocks1Of
    @Sonyrocks1Of 6 месяцев назад +2

    I’m a survivor of domestic abuse a woman I dated used to hit me and and call me names for years and when she locked me out and broke up with me I was happy I just wanted my stuff but she wouldn’t let me in I just stood outside to ask for my stuff she then called the police and I was arrested for stalking even tho I literally only went round one time to get my stuff I wasn’t violent in anyway she then claimed I hit her and she was given the best legal aid for free she then slapped me with a non molestion order my life was ruined because of her lies and what support did I get none NONE woman are EVIL

  • @joshiewhite
    @joshiewhite 6 месяцев назад +2

    I called the police 30+ times on my mums boyfriend after he was hitting her. They'd come. My mum would lie and they'd leave. Fucking ridiculous.

  • @queersnowflake
    @queersnowflake 6 месяцев назад +2

    What a shame for one of the richer countries in the world 🌎 absolutely discard women life's and safety.

  • @LukeMovement1
    @LukeMovement1 6 месяцев назад +1

    Beaten for about 6 years as a kid, the police don't do virtually any aspect of their job without public pressure

  • @KL-zg7lu
    @KL-zg7lu 25 дней назад

    I'm being abused. This person is sending people driving past and disrupting my peace again, and have broken in while I'm sleeping every night (I'm exhausted)
    They even cracked the window, so when I banged on it a bit to get a car running out front to stop, the window pane shattered.
    I am not dealing with this.
    These people have stolen mail and opened various accounts, trying to ruin my credit.

  • @KushQueen9
    @KushQueen9 6 месяцев назад +1

    Useless people who claim to protect victims.

  • @laetitialogan2017
    @laetitialogan2017 6 месяцев назад +1

    Very sad indeed..its no way to live

  • @user-fi8bt3pb3j
    @user-fi8bt3pb3j 6 месяцев назад +2

    sadly some dont go to the police & are in denial/scared yet before we tried to intervene she was dead its very sad he had previous x

  • @RickyJohn-sp1ed
    @RickyJohn-sp1ed 5 месяцев назад

    Well it’s time we took it into our own hands & helped young women like this

  • @DelightfulCabezonFish-ni9iu
    @DelightfulCabezonFish-ni9iu 5 месяцев назад +1

    Too many bullies😮

  • @bereal6590
    @bereal6590 4 месяца назад

    Shouldn't he question be WHY are there so many abusers like this in our society. Should that not be tackled! Not just left to victims and police

  • @fnk101
    @fnk101 6 месяцев назад

    Shocking that we have to have these type of talks

  • @olibirkett331
    @olibirkett331 6 месяцев назад +2

    Nine times I phoned the police to report my ex wife assaulting either myself or our autistic son. I am disabled due to an accident so she would strike my soft spots. Nine times the police hung up on me. fortunately my ex wife was weak. Lost what little respect I baffle the police.

    • @oxygenromania
      @oxygenromania 6 месяцев назад

      Just tell them you identify as a woman

  • @duchesstyra
    @duchesstyra 6 месяцев назад +1

    😔😔😔 currently trying to survive this

  • @saraadam656
    @saraadam656 5 месяцев назад +1

    This absolutely true. Police does not protect victims of abuse. Especially from ex partners. Many times there is nothing they can do - they say. Many times the only thing u can do is run. That's what I had to do. Run away with 2 small kids, miles away and hope he will never find me. Even with miles of evidence of stalking and harassment, threats and assaults, they still done nothing but try to force my children to testify and without that case was dropped. That's the reason why these man feel they can do these things as there is little to none consequence.

  • @beckyjones6062
    @beckyjones6062 6 месяцев назад +2

    Such a hard man on a babies bike knob

  • @water9baby972
    @water9baby972 3 месяца назад +1

    No they most certainly do not do enough!

  • @user-iq5yx4xw9e
    @user-iq5yx4xw9e 6 месяцев назад +2

    The police are letting these women down. They need to have a more robust leadership in the force or lose their jobs.

  • @DonaldHarrington-vl7zq
    @DonaldHarrington-vl7zq 5 месяцев назад

    Over 5 attempted premeditated homicides and the police attempted to cover it up

  • @goatsummoner
    @goatsummoner 6 месяцев назад +3

    Police don't do anything. They show up, talk a bit and say they cant do anythjng. I recall hearing my partner send messages about having to assist another taxi driver because kids were assaulting his car. Police were called, they didnt do anything. The kids were trhowing rocks, aiming at thw drivers. Absolutely disgusting behaviour from both the kids and police.
    Absuers and stalkers don't care about orders. Paper doesn't do anything to protect people. Its the physical enforcement that stops crime, not the words.

    • @Bringon-dw8dx
      @Bringon-dw8dx 6 месяцев назад

      @D-jj5dyit’s not about what’s enough for the police, it’s about what’s enough for CPS.
      The level of evidence required in the uk is insanely high, but it’s not the police who control that

    • @meahdahlgren6537
      @meahdahlgren6537 Месяц назад

      Right sad but true

  • @marklawrence6958
    @marklawrence6958 6 месяцев назад +2

    Ironic that the bbc does a piece on sexual abuse

  • @deannagraves5583
    @deannagraves5583 6 месяцев назад +2

    Huntsville Al police allowed my daughters ex granddaughters father to almost kill my daughter kidnapped their child. He didn't live with them and hadn't for 6 plus months. Never stayed there but police let him beat my daughter unrecognizable and 5 days in the hospital and fluid removed off her brain. They charged him with simple assult 3rd degree and absolutely signed himself out of jail on his own recognance less then 12 hours later. When my daughter was unconscious from him beating her almost to death and was 6 hours away before they even started looking for my grandchild. He was about to cross into Florida but stopped only bc DHR showed up at his brother's house.

  • @skynet1.044
    @skynet1.044 5 месяцев назад

    This countries entire system has failed the British people.

  • @natasharalph866
    @natasharalph866 6 месяцев назад +5

    Yeh my ex stole my keys and the police said becuase you've given them to him we can't do anything. I understand why but it's so scary considering he could be dangerous to me and just let himself in. I've learnt you have to protect yourself and if that means holding onto 1000 just incase you need to move house is the only thing I think would work. Sad because none of us have any money. The other thing that scares me is domestic abuse is sometime made worse by police by giving out information to their ex that makes people more vulnerable. Stay safe.

    • @DuchessCecelia72
      @DuchessCecelia72 6 месяцев назад +2

      Just for information for anyone who finds themselves in this persons situation. There are portable door locks that can be purchased from places like Amazon fairly cheaply (certainly cheaper than replacing all the locks and you can receive them from Amazon in 24 hours which is also very helpful) people generally use these locks for hotel room but they are ideal in this situation. There are several kinds and could also be used to lock a bedroom door in an emergency situation so you have a safe room. Please note: In the safe room situation it is very important to make sure you have everything you might need in the room before locking yourself in eg: water, phone, food, nappies etc you might find yourself stuck for sometime before your abuser looses interest. And remember a small kitchen bin can be used as a toilet in an emergency! Don’t forget about your pets as these are the things your abuser knows you care about and their wellbeing can be used against you in an attempt to get you to leave the safe room. Being organised is the key!

  • @livejeenawithstyle
    @livejeenawithstyle 5 месяцев назад

    Nothing happens best to stay alone but what if siblings are horrible

  • @mintint4965
    @mintint4965 6 месяцев назад +15

    This is crazy. When my daughter had a fall and bumped her head we took her to the hospital. I was really angry at my missus because I told her not to use the baby chair with the strap, I told her it was too flimsy to take her weight, I was so angry was scolding her all the time we were at A&E. The nurses and doctors suspected domestic abuse and reported it. She got calls from the police and was asked if she was under pressure and she can tell them if I was abusive etc. I don't blame the nurses and doctors for suspecting, I was basically being verbally abusive because I was so angry at the time my daughter had to get a head scan and there was a small fracture on her skull. They were just doing their job reporting the situation as any responsible doctor would do. She told me the police questioned her thoroughly she had to assure them that I was not abusive and she was not under threat. She said in our case at least the police were very professional and she thanked them for their efforts.

    • @Nushka23
      @Nushka23 6 месяцев назад +13

      “I was verbally abusive to my partner because I was stressed but rest assured, she told the police nothing was wrong”

    • @mintint4965
      @mintint4965 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Nushka23 Yeah I was. It happens in a marriage. We love each other she has been verbally abusive to me when I do dumb things. But we never hit each other. Are you married do you have kids?

    • @mintint4965
      @mintint4965 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@Nushka23 My point is I think the hospital staff and police acted very profesionally.

    • @TheAArmstrong
      @TheAArmstrong 6 месяцев назад

      @@Nushka23 Called real life petal. Couples get angry at each other….

    • @TheAArmstrong
      @TheAArmstrong 6 месяцев назад

      @@mintint4965 Just someone looking for an argument.

  • @3Zclap
    @3Zclap 6 месяцев назад +7

    there needs to be a serious reform for protecting ones self in there own home, atm you are not allowed by law to protect urself even if you are being burglarized you cant go get a knife or a stick or anything by law you have to let them rob you...