SEE ALL:
Under our Currant Government!
Bid to save legal aid; for domestic violence victims.
The government
faces a legal challenge to the lawfulness of legal aid reforms which the
claimants say prevent domestic violence victims getting financial help in
family law cases. The action has been brought by two charities - the Public Law
Project and Rights of Women - with the support of the Law Society, which has
provided indemnity against adverse costs.
On 1 April the
Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 came into effect
removing legal aid for the majority of private family law matters. Accompanying
it, the Civil Legal Aid (Procedure) Regulations 2012 introduced criteria making
legal aid available for those affected by domestic violence.
However the groups
claim the evidential requirements to prove domestic violence are too narrow and
exclude many women even where it is clear there has been violence or that there
is an on-going risk. The LASPO definition of domestic violence is any incident,
or pattern of incidents, of controlling, coercive or threatening behaviour,
violence or abuse whether psychological, physical, sexual, financial or
emotional between individuals who are associated with each other.
However some of
these forms of violence would not fall into the prescriptive evidential
requirement. In addition, the evidence provision in many cases has a 24-month
time limit and the charities argue that it is too restrictive as perpetrators
may remain a lifelong threat.
A survey carried
out last year by Rights of Women, Women’s Aid and Welsh Women’s Aid showed that
half of all women surveyed who had experienced or were experiencing domestic
violence did not have the prescribed forms of evidence to access family law
legal aid.
Of those 61% took
no action in relation to their family law problem as a result of not being able
to get legal aid.
Law Society
president Nicholas Fluck said: ‘The LASPO legal aid cuts have resulted in
radical consequences for access to justice with the worst impact affecting the
poorest and most vulnerable sectors of society.
‘It is vital that survivors of domestic abuse can bring evidence to
satisfy the broader statutory meaning of domestic violence, not the over-strict
tests required by the regulations as they now stand.’
*And victims are forced to disclose their “address” when making
applications to the courts! “Perpetrators
Paradise”!!
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