Newsroom

Orange County Domestic Violence Commission
Seeks to Tighten Laws to Help Save Lives

02 March 2015

(From left): Senator David Simmons, Florida Senate, District 10; DVC Co-Chairs Dick Batchelor, President, Dick Batchelor Management Group, Inc., and Circuit Judge Alice Blackwell, Ninth Judicial Circuit Court, and Carol Wick, Chief Executive Officer of Harbor House, recently gathered for a press conference to announce the two new bills that will help domestic violence survivors.

Orange County leaders are helping to further protect domestic violence survivors. Recently, members of the Orange County Domestic Violence Commission (DVC) outlined two bills for the upcoming legislative session this month that will help save lives. Both the bills are sponsored by Senator David Simmons, (Florida Senate, District 10), who is also the Rules Committee Chairman.

Simmons, Carol Wick, Chief Executive Officer of Harbor House, as well as DVC Co-Chairs Circuit Judge Alice Blackwell, Ninth Judicial Circuit Court and Dick Batchelor, President, Dick Batchelor Management Group, Inc., announced the two bills during a recent press conference.

The “No contact legislation bill” (Senate Bill 342) will ensure that once an order of no contact has been ordered by the court that it will be in effect immediately – beginning while the perpetrator is in jail and will remain in effect until modified by the court.

“This has been a growing concern that perpetrators of violence, specifically domestic violence, are calling victims from jail to intimidate and harass after an order of no contact had been ordered by the court,” explained Wick.

The “Electronic monitoring bill” (Senate Bill 1286) would make it a third-degree felony to tamper with an electronic monitoring device issued to alleged abusers who have had an injunction filed against them. Currently, it is not a criminal act to tamper with or remove a court-mandated electronic monitoring device unless issued as part of community control.

“Orange County’s Domestic Violence Commission represents a true community-coordinated response to the specific domestic violence issues faced in our community,” said Mayor Teresa Jacobs. “I’m so proud that these pieces of legislation are a result of the Commission’s recommendations. The bills will be instrumental in closing the legal loopholes in our system to ensure that domestic violence survivors get the protection they deserve.”

In addition, the Florida Sheriff’s Association and the Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence support the legislation.

“As advocates, both of these bills are critical to the safety of not only domestic abuse survivors but any person who is a victim of a crime where the offender still poses a threat,” added Wick. “Very simply, they protect survivors of violent crime and hold offenders responsible.”

In 2014, Orange County’s Domestic Violence Commission provided more than 60 recommendations for improvements to services for Orange County families impacted by domestic violence.