Lesbians More Prone to Partner Violence Than Gay Men

2010-08-30
By

A series of high-profile cases of lesbian-perpetrated domestic violence has sent shock-waves through Massachusetts communities in recent months:

1. On February 16, a Suffolk Superior Court jury convicted Nicole Chuminski on two counts of second-degree murder, following a fire that killed the two daughters of her lover Anna Reisopoulos. During a heated argument between the two, Chuminski reportedly fell into a fit of rage. A few hours later Chuminski returned to her partner’s apartment and hurled an acetone-laden firebomb into the front door.

Sophia and Acia, ages 2 and 14, were burned beyond recognition, so dental records were needed for positive identification.

2. On March 29 Annamarie Rintala of Granby, Mass. was found dead by strangulation in the basement of the house she shared with her domestic partner Cara. Cara had been previously charged with domestic violence after she struck Annamarie in the back of the head with a closed fist.

3. Eunice Field of Brockton, Mass. found herself on the losing end of a bitter ménage à trois. So on August 9 she marched to the apartment of Lorraine Wachsman. There she grabbed a serrated knife and stabbed Wachsman in the back and neck. Dispelling any doubt about her intentions, she then penned a note admitting she had killed Waschsman “for taking away the love of my life.”

Ms. Field is now being held without bail pending a September 3 court appearance.

Experts on lesbian domestic violence were shocked, but honestly not surprised by these incidents. Last November a report by the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs reported a 125% increase in domestic violence fatalities in lesbian and gay couples around the country during the prior year. According to Beth Leventhal of The Network/La Red of Boston, “partner abuse in LGBT communities can be just as lethal as that in heterosexual communities.”

Ms. Leventhal’s commentary actually understates the extent of the problem. Earlier this year the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research published the results of a survey of over 51,000 California adults . The UCLA study found 28% of persons in lesbian/gay relationships had experienced intimate partner violence, compared to 17% of persons in heterosexual relationships.

It’s also believed that lesbians are more likely to engage in partner violence than gay men. According to the Boston Gay Men’s Domestic Violence Project, one in three homosexual women experience partner aggression, compared to only one in four homosexual men. Kaitlin Nichols of The Network/La Red notes, “The myth of women’s communities as safe communities has prevented many women from reaching out for support. If they have shared what is happening, they are met with disbelief from their community.”

And why are lesbians more likely to abuse?

According to Nomi Porat, an abuse-prevention expert, the reason is poor limit-setting: “An issue common to women, particularly battered women, is the fear of demanding physical and emotional boundaries. In part, battered lesbians are afraid their lovers will leave or become more violent if any limitations are set in the relationship.”

A nearly impenetrable double wall serves to keep lesbian battering tucked away in the proverbial closet. The first wall is the stigmatization invoked by lesbians themselves who believe in a sort of same-sex utopia, the feminist belief that maintains female-female relationships are inherently more peaceful, gentle, and “pure,” compared to male-female relationships.

In Naming the Violence: Speaking out About Lesbian Battering, Barbara Hart maintains that female batterers should be subjected to a form of shunning by the lesbian community: “one of the consequences of [female batterers’] violence is that they may have to limit any contact with the person they assaulted/abused. This may mean that the batterer cannot attend public gatherings or movement meetings.”

The second wall is the broader domestic violence industry that maintains a cult-like belief in the notion of patriarchal sexism, the theory that men abuse their wives due to an innate and irrepressible urge to oppress women. So every time a woman pummels, rapes, or otherwise abuses her female partner, the patriarchal dominance theory takes a body-blow.

These ideological blinders serve to justify shelters policies that turn away of needy women. According to the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs, the problem of abuse shelters that discriminate on the basis of gender identity is widespread.
Intimate partner aggression is not a problem limited to any particular sex, or gender identity, or economic group. Indeed, research shows women are at least as likely as men to engage in partner abuse.

When the Sisterhood gets over its denial of the truth, we’ll stop seeing so many women and men victimized by domestic violence.

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  • PaulMurrayCbr

    AFAIK: lesbian DV victims are actively shunned by the lesbian community. It contradicts the narrative, you see.

  • Male_DV_Victim

     It’s men that need protection form ALL women, hetero or gay.

  • Tombraiderman19

    Wow! This was an interesting article. People always see domestic violence as the husband victimizing the wife. But thats not the only face of domestic violence. Hopefully people will see that every group, not just victimized hetero women, need help.

  • Alice

    Surprise suprise.

    Not to say DV isn’t a problem in general ( I know heterosexuals with this problem), but with some of the lesbians I know I’d be surprised if they weren’t duking it out. From what I see, this is particularly bad when both are very aggressive mixed with substance abuse issues.

    And that’s just being real.

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  • scott

    Mr Roberts, you are one of my favorite writers here on MND, when MND closes, where can we read yer writings??

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  • http://heterodoxhomosexual.blogspot.com/ Doctor Whom

    I wonder how the “lesbians can do no wrong, and gay men can do no right” LGBT media will spin this.

  • Mr.K

    Carey Roberts,
    A feminist leader was quoted on the Internet as saying that by destroying the traditional marriage, LGBT will achieve true equality.
    But with the enactment of gay marriage, will the police also enforce mandatory arrest, spousal rape, primary aggressor etc laws as feminist have forced for heterosexual marriages?

  • Paul R

    “According to Nomi Porat, an abuse-prevention expert, the reason is poor limit-setting:”

    While Porat refers to setting limits to your partner’s behavior, I also suspect there’s a problem with women setting limits on their own behavior. First, women have fewer societal limitations on their own behavior. Second, women have fewer limitations on their use of violence, as such violence is commonly directed at men, and women believe violence directed at men is acceptable. (Remember what Joe Biden said about his sister.)

    Two women in a relationship will likely believe they have no limits on their use of violence. If a man gets out of hand, you slap him. If a woman gets out of hand, you slap her. Women are not taught to limit their use of violence because they believe it’s “harmless,” and thus permitted. Thus, two women in a relationship would likely result in higher rates of violence. IMHO.

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  • scott

    I’m sure these violent women had histories of domestic violence, but because of the gender feminist perversion of our law enforcement…womens violence is being “Enabled”.
    Who will and is paying the highest price for womens violence,(especially elevated levels of violence in the lesbian community) it is the children.
    It is a perversion of our law enforcement community that refuses to charge women for their violence, that is fostering elevated levels of violence in the lesbian community.

  • scott

    Lesbian violence is a dirty little secret, for the acknowledgment of lesbian violence would not further “Empower” the Gender / Raunch community as a whole.

  • Mr.K

    In United States vs. Gluzman the appellate court upheld the murder conviction of a woman for killing a man. Would the US also intervene under VAWA in a State case if a lesbian killed a lesbian? Link to the 2nd USCA ruling.

    http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-2nd-circuit/1350389.html


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