Training will help Wisconsin police gauge if domestic abuse is likely to end in homicide

Ashley Luthern
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Patti Seger, executive director of End Domestic Abuse Wisconsin, speaks during a news conference with Attorney General Brad Schimel, right, announcing the expanded use of a tool to better predict risk deadly violence in domestic abuse.

Police agencies throughout Wisconsin will receive training on how to predict which domestic violence situations are most likely to escalate to homicide, Attorney General Brad Schimel announced Monday.  

The centerpiece of the program is a form, known as lethality screening, that lists 11 questions front-line officers should ask all domestic abuse victims.

The questions are designed to get information ranging from an abuser's prior use of weapons and access to guns to past instances of choking or strangulation and threats to a victim's life.

The stakes are high: On average, about one person a week dies as a result of domestic violence in Wisconsin.

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The state Department of Justice is funneling $500,000 in federal grants to End Domestic Abuse Wisconsin to expand lethality training between July 2018 and June 2020, Schimel said at a news conference Monday.

He called it a "tremendous step forward in developing safety and security to families and communities."

So far, 93 law enforcement agencies and 17 victim service organizations in 20 counties have been trained to use the screening, he said. 

End Domestic Abuse Wisconsin already has scheduled training in St. Croix and Iowa counties, thanks to the influx of grant money.

Monday's announcement should be "a call to action for those remaining 50 counties to start using this tool," said Patti Seger, the organization's executive director.

Representatives from every police agency in Milwaukee County received the training in 2014 and have since developed a "high-risk" team to review those cases that have high lethality scores. Prosecutors, police, case workers and advocates all meet weekly to determine how best to intervene in those cases. 

Clients are noticing a difference with the consistent messaging about their risk, said Carmen Pitre, executive director of the Sojourner Family Peace Center in Milwaukee, where officials made their announcement Monday.

"Every person in the system is saying 'People in your situation who have this score, who face this set of circumstances, are more likely to be murdered or killed,'" Pitre said.

"And victims say it's registering different for them when every person in the system is now saying that."

How to get help

The Sojourner Family Peace Center in Milwaukee operates a 24-hour hotline at(414) 933-2722. Those who call the hotline can take the lethality assessment with a client advocate.

The National Domestic Abuse hotline is(800) 799-7233. In an emergency, call 911.