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From YouTube: eNOugh (Full Version)
Description
For assistance call 211.
For women who need assistance call Helpmate at 828.254.0516
Learn more about the eNOugh campaign at https://www.buncombecounty.org/law-safety/family-justice-center/enough.aspx.
A
A
Over
the
past
year,
a
lot
of
stakeholders
in
Buncombe
County
to
include
the
sheriff's
office,
Asheville
Police
Department,
the
District
Attorney's
Office
mission,
hospital
health
and
human
services,
just
Kadri
of
folks
to
include
Commissioner
Holly
Jones
have
been
working
together
to
try
to
come
up
with
a
better
best
practice
for
how
we
deal
with
cases
of
domestic
violence.
What
2013
really
showed
us
here
in
Buncombe
County
was
that
that
problem
is
increasingly
getting
worse.
B
Very
excited
that
in
Buncombe
County
we
have
identified
not
one
model
but
several
models
that
are
rendering
great
results
in
other
communities
and
we're
going
to
bundle
them
together
and
bundling
them
together.
I
think
we
were
going
to
make
a
strong
statement
that
we
have
had
enough
enough
violence
against
women
in
this
community
and
that
offenders
will
be
prosecuted
and
they
will
be
punished
for
for
violent
behavior.
We.
C
Have
a
very
strong
community
in
the
area
of
domestic
violence,
we
have
specialized
domestic
violence
court.
We
have
agencies
such
as
helpmate
our
voice
who
help
victims.
We
have
an
aggressive
prosecutor's
office
who
attacks
domestic
violence
in
the
courtroom.
The
clerk's
office
helps
with
the
civil
restraining
orders
and
domestic
violence,
but
we
have
found
that
there's
a
need
to
improve
those
services
and
reach
out
more
to
victims,
so
we've
developed
a
comprehensive
that
has
basically
five
points
of
attack
on
domestic
violence.
C
One
of
those
is
the
use
of
a
locality
assessment
across
the
board
in
our
community
and
we've
selected
the
campbell
lethality
assessment.
It
is
a
20
question
assessment
for
victims
to
complete
and
based
upon
their
answers
and
based
upon
extensive
research
by
dr.
Campbell
from
John
Hopkins
University,
we're
able
to
identify
those
individuals
who
are
at
a
high
risk
of
being
murdered
or
have
an
attempted
murder,
and
there
are
services
and
interventions.
We
can
then
put
in
place
to
protect
them
with.
D
And
helpmate,
and
also
within
our
community
partners,
we
will
be
conducting
an
evidence-based
lethality
assessment
protocol.
Where
we'll
be
asking
a
series
of
questions,
that's
designed
to
predict
the
amount
of
risk
that
each
survivor
has
of
potentially
being
a
victim
of
homicide.
So
we'll
conduct
those
at
every
entry
point
to
our
service
system
on
our
crisis
line.
D
When
people
come
to
our
shelter
when
people
come
in
for
counseling
or
court
advocacy
services
at
any
point
that
we
encounter
a
victim,
we're
going
to
sit
down
with
them
and
have
a
conversation
about
the
level
of
danger
that
they're
experiencing
in
the
level
of
risk
that
they
have
that
information
based
on
a
tried-and-true
researched
method
for
predicting
violent
behavior
from
perpetrators
will
give
us
a
much
clearer
picture
of
what
that
victims.
Risk
looks
like
so
that
we
can
provide
the
most
appropriate
support
needed
for
that
family.
It.
A
C
Is
a
shorter
lethality
assessment
from
the
Maryland
model
that
is
for
first
responders
in
law
enforcement
to
use
in
the
field,
and
so
one
of
the
goals
of
our
program
is
to
train
law
enforcement
and
the
use
of
that
without
a
assessment
in
the
field.
And
if
an
individual
was
marked
as
a
highly
thala
t
risk
than
there
are
protocols
put
in
place
to
get
help
to
those
victims.
C
We're
also
looking
at
a
high
risk
domestic
violence
team,
which
is
from
the
state
of
Massachusetts,
who
did
a
program
and
implemented
this
multidisciplinary
team
to
track
high-risk
cases.
They
have
two
functions.
One
is
to
contain
the
offender
so
that
the
offender
cannot
commit
new
acts
of
domestic
violence
and
two
is
to
assist
the
victim
with
safety
planning
and
resources.
Public.
B
Safety
has
to
be
our
number
one
priority,
as
I've
looked
and
learned
more
and
more
about
the
epidemic
of
domestic
violence,
I
started
looking
for
the
best
practices
in
other
communities
and
I
came
across
this
in
my
written
literature
review,
a
model
that
had
had
some
powerful
impacts
in
Massachusetts
and
so
very
quickly.
I
passed
along
this
research
and
this
model
to
staff
at
Buncombe,
County
and
no
surprise
to
me,
but
Mandie,
stone
and
rich
monger
jumped
on
it
immediately.
B
E
I'm
excited
about
in
this
initiative
is
the
dual
focus.
There
are
components
of
it
that
are
about
the
containment
of
the
offender,
ensuring
that
the
victim
safe,
ensuring
that
the
community
safe
from
that
individual
and
then
there
are
also
components
of
it
that
focus
on
the
victim
safety
and
how
we
provide
the
resources
to
support
that
victim
and
moving
to
a
safe
and
sustainable
independent
living
arrangement
for
themselves
and
often
their
children.
Our.
D
Goal
is
to
help
people
be
as
safe
as
they
can
be
wherever
they
are,
and
so
will
do
comprehensive
work
with
that
with
that
victim
and
with
that
family,
to
try
to
make
sure
that
there's
as
much
safety
there
as
possible.
It's
very
exciting
to
me
that
we're
able
to
do
this
work
with
closer
collaboration
with
the
other
systems
in
County,
there's
already
strong
law
enforcement
response
to
domestic
violence
and
they're
strong
prosecution
for
domestic
violence
here
in
Buncombe
County.
C
Model
in
Massachusetts
over
a
six-year
period,
they
studied
the
outcomes
in
counties
with
this
model
in
place.
They
had
no
domestic
violence
fatalities
in
counties.
Without
it
they
had
249
fatalities.
It's
a
pretty
strong
indication
that
what
they're
doing
works
and
we
want
to
bring
that
model
to
Buncombe
County.
C
There's
also
a
focused
deterrence
program
for
domestic
violence:
offenders
that
is
from
High
Point
North
Carolina.
That's
been
very
successful.
We've
already
implemented
some
high
point,
focused
deterrence
programs
in
Buncombe
County,
but
we're
going
to
bring
the
domestic
violence
piece
as
well.
They've
had
some
great
research
and
data
to
support
that
their
program
works.
It
brings
in
all
domestic
violence
offenders,
not
just
the
highly
thala
t
risk
offenders
and
they've
been
able
to
drop
their
recidivism
rate
to
seven
point.
C
F
F
These
cases
are
identified
as
high-risk
case,
where
the
offenders
have
been
identified,
has
people
who,
because
of
their
behavior
in
the
past,
because
of
their
behavior,
currently
that
they
present
a
high
risk
to
the
community
and
to
their
families,
and
we
will
give
them
special
attention
in
this
court,
which
will
meet
on
a
regular
basis.
Have
the
same
prosecutors
have
the
same
judge
assigned
so
that
will
have
a
continuity
of
how
we
deal
with
their
case.
There.
A
Is
a
model
in
high
point
called
focus
deterrence,
and
basically
that
is
a
model
where
the
offenders
get
called
in
and
they
get
offered
some
help
in
the
way
of
counseling.
Maybe
job
help
with
job
placement
different
things
that
contribute
to
that
piece
that
that
results
in
that
domestic
violence,
but
also
they're
sitting
there
in
front
of
their
police
chief's
there
sheriff
their
da,
and
we
also
communicate
the
message
that
we
know
what's
happened
here.
A
If
this
happens
again,
you
will
get
no
help,
you
will
get
the
full
brunt
of
the
law
enforcement
system
and
you'll
be
held
accountable.
We
currently
use
this
structure
with
our
violent
criminal
offenders
that
we
call
in
and
and
use
this
structure
to
deal
with
them
with
hopes
that
they
will
change
their
behavior
and
do
differently
by
having
the
structure
in
place.
We
can
add
this
piece
on
with
domestic
violence
and
domestic
violence
offenders,
and
we
think
it's
going
to
work
very
well.
We've
already
got
that
structure
going.
E
It's
about
sending
the
message
is
a
community
that
domestic
violence
is
unacceptable.
We
won't
tolerate
it,
but
that
our
value
say
we're
going
to
take
a
stand
community-wide
against
it.
It's
also
a
domestic
violence
has
a
significant
impact
on
child
abuse
and
neglect,
which
is
a
core
county
responsibility,
as
well
as
law
enforcement.
So
I
think
it
has
an
impact
both
in
terms
of
prevention
of
future
abuse,
neglect
and
children
and
risk
to
victims,
and
it
clearly
also
has
the
potential
to
reduce
the
calls
to
our
law
enforcement
entities.
A
The
second
piece
that
is
really
different
than
what
we've
done
in
the
past
is
it
will
involve
a
monitoring
bracelet
that
will
be
attached
to
the
offender.
You
know
so
many
times
our
strategies
around
domestic
violence
go
to
limit
the
movement
of
the
victim
and
really
kind
of
putting
on
the
victim
the
responsibility
of
being
safe,
staying
safe,
where
this
model
really
addresses
the
offender
and
their
behavior
and
what
they
can
and
can't
do
and
of
course,
along
with
this
monitor,
will
be
a
structure
to
respond
that
law
enforcement
will
be
able
to
respond.
A
C
Have
electronic
monitoring
in
Buncombe
County
with
our
pretrial
release
program,
it's
very
effective.
However,
we
are
going
to
add
a
piece
of
that
just
for
domestic
violence.
Offenders
and
what's
unique
about
that
is
the
victim
will
be
given
a
monitor
that
they
can
carry.
That
will
notify
them
if
their
offender
is
within
their
safe
zone,
so
if
they're
around
their
home
or
their
workplace
or
even
if
they're,
at
the
mall,
and
if
the
victims
at
the
mall
and
the
offender
it
just
happens
to
come
there
by
chance,
she
will
be
notified
that
he's
close.
C
We
also
are
going
to
implement
a
cross
system
dialogue
which
allows
each
service
organization
entity
that's
dealing
with
domestic
violence,
issues
to
evaluate
the
strength
of
their
communication
within
their
own
entity
and
then
bring
everyone
to
the
table
and
work
on
how
we
communicate
with
each
other.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
there's
no
information
that
is
lost
because
it
didn't
get
sent
to
the
right
person
at
the
right
time
and
that
will
keep
victim
safe.
C
F
So
we
don't
always
see
each
other,
but
now,
with
this
new
collaboration,
what
we're
going
to
do
is
make
sure
that
we
share
information
that
we
meet
on
a
regular
basis
to
talk
about
these
cases
that
have
been
identified
as
special
cases
that
need
the
extra
attention
and
I
believe
that
will
allow
us
to
better
serve
the
victims
in
these
cases
better
serve
the
community
the
by
making
it
a
safer
community,
better
able
to
tailor
the
punishment
so
that
it
will
fit
exactly
the
needs
of
each
criminal
defendant.
I.
D
I
just
like
to
express
my
gratitude
for
the
leaders
in
Buncombe
County
that
have
made
this
initiative
possible.
County,
Commissioner,
Holly,
Jones,
really
envisioned
this
program
and
it's
through
her
leadership
that
it's
coming
to
fruition
and
I
believe
that
I
know
that
it
couldn't
happen
without
leadership
from
our
sheriff
and
Duncan
from
Asheville's
police
chief
from
mandi
stone.
There's
a
lot
of
people
who
have
really
put
an
amazing
amount
of
work
into
creating
a
better
system
for
safety
and
security
for
victims
of
domestic
violence.
Here,
what.
E
I
would
most
want
the
community
to
know
about.
This
is
that
every
member
of
the
community
has
a
role
to
play.
It's
about
all
of
us,
standing
together
and
saying
enough
we're
stopping
the
mythic
violence
in
our
community
that
we,
we
demand
a
community
where
every
individual's
safe
from
abuse,
and
that
that's
the
piece
that
I
would
most
want
the
community
to
know
it's
not
just
about
agencies
or
the
courts.
C
A
lot
of
communities
are
really
struggling
with
domestic
violence
issues
and
the
increase
in
the
violence
and
I'm
unaware
of
any
community.
That's
taken
all
these
different
programs
and
implemented
them
at
one
time,
especially
without
the
benefit
of
federal
grants
and
special
hiring
additional
people.
So
what
we've
done
is
research.
What
are
the
best
practices
in
the
country?
What
works?
Is
it
evidence-based
and
then
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
blend
it
into
the
existing
services?
We
already
have
in
Buncombe
County
to
make
a
comprehensive
plan
that
will
work
for
everyone.
One.
B
Of
the
reasons
that
this
issue
is
so
important
to
me
is
because
I
have
a
daughter
and
I
want
her
to
live
in
a
community
that
is
a
safe
community
for
her
and
her
friends
and
their
mothers
and
their
grandmothers.
So
this
is
this
is
kind
of
the
powerful
impetus
behind
my
initial
energy
to
to
see
what
what
we
were
doing
here
in
buckham
county.
Ultimately,
the
goal
for
this
program
is
for
women
to
feel
safe
in
their
communities
and
have
peace
of
mind
in
the
in
the
long
run.