VintageBetter
Senior Member
If you do not have a NY Times subscription, you might be able to find this opinion peice by searching for the headline. Certain sites kind of steal news articles.
If you can read the whole thing, it's a great read. Opinion | What the O.J. Trial Taught America About Domestic Violence
Concluding paragraphs of the above aricle:
But many more who were victims of domestic abuse understood from the verdict what the news didn’t say: that no one would save them, no system of law enforcement, no court, no friend or family. Kit Gruelle, a North Carolina victims’ advocate who has worked in the field for 35 years, told me the trial was “an unholy union of race and domestic violence.” For people who worked in domestic violence, “there was this sense like, ‘We told you this was going to happen,’” she said. “We were united in our outrage.”
Today, for all that has changed since Ms. Brown Simpson’s death (better laws, better training for law enforcement), progress often feels stymied. Victims are too often disbelieved; courts too often treat intimate partner abuse as a nuisance crime. Our first question all too often is still “Why didn’t she leave?” — as Ms. Brown Simpson left.
It’s not that we couldn’t understand the lessons of her death at the time; it’s that we can’t seem to remember them.
Here's an article about Nicole seeking help from a DV shelter just 5 days before O.J. killed her. I have forgotten about many of these details. For the most part, unless it's a celebrity being hurt, the L. A. press still doesn't cover the DV issue much. That might be to avoid readers imitating their heroes as they beat their partners. Or, it might be merely because not much crime is covered in the L.A. press other than murders and car chases. DV is pretty dull by comparison, I guess?
IDK. I don't know how news directors or newspaper owners think.
Nicole sought aid days before killings - UPI Archives
Here is a description of the author's book.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33786693-no-visible-bruises
If you can read the whole thing, it's a great read. Opinion | What the O.J. Trial Taught America About Domestic Violence
Concluding paragraphs of the above aricle:
But many more who were victims of domestic abuse understood from the verdict what the news didn’t say: that no one would save them, no system of law enforcement, no court, no friend or family. Kit Gruelle, a North Carolina victims’ advocate who has worked in the field for 35 years, told me the trial was “an unholy union of race and domestic violence.” For people who worked in domestic violence, “there was this sense like, ‘We told you this was going to happen,’” she said. “We were united in our outrage.”
Today, for all that has changed since Ms. Brown Simpson’s death (better laws, better training for law enforcement), progress often feels stymied. Victims are too often disbelieved; courts too often treat intimate partner abuse as a nuisance crime. Our first question all too often is still “Why didn’t she leave?” — as Ms. Brown Simpson left.
It’s not that we couldn’t understand the lessons of her death at the time; it’s that we can’t seem to remember them.
Here's an article about Nicole seeking help from a DV shelter just 5 days before O.J. killed her. I have forgotten about many of these details. For the most part, unless it's a celebrity being hurt, the L. A. press still doesn't cover the DV issue much. That might be to avoid readers imitating their heroes as they beat their partners. Or, it might be merely because not much crime is covered in the L.A. press other than murders and car chases. DV is pretty dull by comparison, I guess?
IDK. I don't know how news directors or newspaper owners think.
Nicole sought aid days before killings - UPI Archives
Here is a description of the author's book.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33786693-no-visible-bruises