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Monday, July 18,
2005, FOXNews.com
By Wendy McElroy |
On June 27, in the case of Castle Rock v. Gonzales,
the Supreme Court found that Jessica Gonzales did not have a
constitutional right to police protection even in the presence of a
restraining order.
By a vote of 7-to-2, the Supreme Court ruled that Gonzales has no
right to sue her local police department for failing to protect her
and her children from her estranged husband.
The post-mortem discussion on Gonzales has been fiery but it has
missed an obvious point. If the government won't protect you, then
you have to take responsibility for your own self-defense and that
of your family. The court's ruling is a sad decision, but one that
every victim and/or potential victim of violence must note: calling
the police is not enough. You must also be ready to defend yourself.
In 1999, Gonzales obtained a restraining order against her estranged
husband Simon, which limited his access to their children. On June
22, 1999, Simon abducted their three daughters. Though the Castle
Rock police department disputes some of the details of what happened
next, the two sides are in basic agreement: After her daughters'
abduction, Gonzales repeatedly phoned the police for assistance.
Officers visited the home. Believing Simon to be non-violent and,
arguably, in compliance with the limited access granted by the
restraining order, the police did nothing.
The next morning, Simon committed "suicide by cop." He shot a gun
repeatedly through a police station window and was killed by
returned fire. The murdered bodies of Leslie, 7, Katheryn, 9 and
Rebecca, 10 were found in Simon's pickup truck.
In her lawsuit, Gonzales claimed the police violated her 14th
Amendment right to due process and sued them for $30 million. She
won at the Appeals level.
What were the arguments that won and lost in the Supreme Court?
Winners: local officials fell back upon a rich history of court
decisions that found the police to have no constitutional obligation
to protect individuals from private individuals. In 1856, the U.S.
Supreme Court (South v. Maryland) found that law enforcement
officers had no affirmative duty to provide such protection. In 1982
(Bowers v. DeVito), the Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit held,
"...there is no Constitutional right to be protected by the state
against being murdered by criminals or madmen."
Later court decisions have concurred.
Losers: anti-domestic violence advocates and women's groups, such as
the National Association of Women Lawyers, failed to establish that
restraining orders were constitutional entitlements. If they had
succeeded, the enforcement of such orders would have been guaranteed
by due process. Failure to enforce them would have been grounds for
a lawsuit against the police, a precedent that local officials
feared would flood them with expensive litigation.
Public analysis of Rock v. Gonzales has been largely defined by
these two opposing positions.
A third position cries out: Given the court's position that the
police are not obliged to protect us, responsible adults need the
ability to defend themselves. Thus, no law or policy should impede
the access to gun ownership.
Responsible adults — both male and female — have both a right and a
need to defend themselves and their families, with lethal force if
necessary. If domestic violence advocates had focused on putting a
gun in Jessica's hand and training her to use it, then the three
Gonzales children might still be alive. After all, Jessica knew
where her husband was. Indeed, she informed the police repeatedly of
his location.
Of course, the Gonzales case — in and of itself — presents
difficulties for the use of armed force by private citizens. Would
the same police who believed Simon Gonzales was not dangerous have
believed Jessica to be justified in picking up a gun to protect her
children from him? Would the police have charged her for use of a
weapon? Regardless, these sticky debates would probably be taking
place in the presence of three living children and not three dead
ones.
Nevertheless, most anti-domestic violence advocates strenuously
avoid gun ownership as a possible solution to domestic violence.
Instead, they appeal for more police intervention even though the
police have no obligation to provide protection.
When groups like the National Organization for Women (NOW) do focus
on gun ownership, it is to make such statements as, "Guns and
domestic violence make a lethal combination, injuring and killing
women every day."
In short, NOW addresses the issue of gun ownership and domestic
violence only in order to demand a prohibition on the ability of
abusers — always defined as men — to own weapons.
That position may be defensible. But it ignores half of the
equation. It ignores the need of potential victims to defend
themselves and their families. Anti-domestic violence and women's
groups create the impression that guns are always part of the
problem and never part of the solution.
The current mainstream of feminism — from which most anti-domestic
violence advocates proceed — is an expression of left liberalism. It
rejects private solutions based on individual rights in favor of
laws aimed at achieving social goals. A responsible individual
holding a gun in self-defense does not fit their vision of society.
In the final analysis, such advocates do not trust the judgment of
the women they claim to be defending. They do not believe that
Jessica Gonzales' three children would have been safer with a mother
who was armed and educated in gun use.
The clear message of Gonzales bears repeating because you will not
hear it elsewhere. The police have no obligation to protect
individuals who, therefore, should defend themselves. The content of
state laws does not matter; by Colorado State law, the police are
required to "use every reasonable means to enforce a protection
order." The Supreme Court has ruled and that's that.
In the wake of Gonzales, every anti-domestic violence advocate
should advise victims — male or female — to learn self-defense. They
should lobby for the repeal of any law or policy that hinders
responsible gun ownership.
The true meaning of being anti-domestic violence means is to help
victims out of their victimhood and into a position of power.
Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com and a research fellow
for The Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif. She is the author
of "Liberty for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century"
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her
husband in Canada.
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