The Days After
United Front Against Violence Fraying, Program Founders Say
In the early '90s, a group that included a police officer, an activist, a judge and a prosecutor saw a hole in the criminal justice community's efforts against domestic violence in the city.
Ralph Peters, then a high-ranking officer with the Lafayette Police Department, and Linda Boudreaux, who was involved in the local anti- violence movement, were among that group.
"When we looked at what was available in Lafayette, we had all the services except for a batterer's program," said Boudreaux, now executive director of the nonprofit The Extra Mile.
Classes addressed anger issues, but "domestic violence is not about anger out of control, it's about power and control," Peters said.
The formation of the Family Violence Intervention Program marked a time when law enforcement and the courts were working closely together on domestic violence, Boudreaux said.
"We had all the key players at the table. As long as certain people stayed in place, Lafayette was a model community for domestic violence intervention," she said.
Peters said the group passed the hat for membership dues and shortly afterward incorporated the local FVIP under the concepts of the Domestic Abuse Intervention Project of Duluth, Minn., widely accepted as the most successful program against domestic violence in the country.
"It just clicked," Boudreaux said. "The whole team worked well."
While Peters was a major in the Lafayette Police Department, he taught a mandatory 16-hour domestic violence training course for officers. He was also instrumental in the police department getting a grant that paid for officers' overtime when investigating domestic violence-related cases.
Since Peters left three years ago to become police chief in Natchitoches, the police department chose not to reapply for the grant. It expired last year.
Peters, now retired, keeps in touch with what is going on in area law enforcement.
"I feel that the system is working, but it could work a lot better because there's still a lot of domestic violence and there's obviously still a lot of women being killed," he said.
Article Sections
- The Days After
- Fewer Than Half of Accused Abusers Convicted in a Year
- Lafayette Among Top 5 Parishes for Protective Orders
- Caseloads Keep Courts Busy
- Prosecutors Caught Between Victims and Duty
- Finding a Way to Hope Again
- Father's Grief Shaded by Questions
- Concern Doesn't End With Shift
- Doctor Sees the Cases That Aren't Always Counted
- Ending the Cycle of Violence, One Abuser at a Time
- United Front Against Violence Fraying, Program Founders Say
- A Year in Domestic Violence
- Ouachita Putting Aid for Victims Under One Roof
- Resources, Training Hinder Law Enforcement Response Locally
- Opinion: Let's Start a Serious Dialogue for the Families
- Opinion: Domestic Violence is a Real Event That Occurs Every Day
- Stories That Will Never Be Told
- About this Section
- 2006 Dart Award Final Judges
Jason Brown
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Jason Brown, 28, began his career as an intern at The Daily Advertiser in 2004 and was promoted to a full-time night cops position shortly afterward.
Since then, Brown has worked as a general assignment reporter focusing on public safety and environmental issues.
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