FROM THE ARCHIVE
Alaska city might end domestic violence law
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2001 In order to cut costs, the city of Fairbanks is considering repealing its domestic violence law and passing prosecution and incarceration duties onto the state. The city pays more than $75,000 a year to jail domestic violence offenders, said a city council who wants the law repealed. Prosecution costs are not known. If the law is repealed, police would continue to investigate domestic violence as usual. Alaska Native women are victims of domestic violence at disproportionately high rates. Get the Story:
Fairbanks may repeal domestic violence law (AP 11/22) Related Stories:
Campbell stamping out domestic violence (11/13)
Pueblos awarded domestic violence grants (11/6)
Meeting addressing Native violence (10/23)
DOJ: American Indians highest injured (6/25)
Ashcroft promises violence funding (4/6)
DOJ: Violent crime plagues Indian Country (3/19)
Fiscal Year 2002: The Budget Overview (3/1)
Grants awarded to combat domestic violence (12/05)
Violence act signed into law (10/30)
Violence against women act renewed (10/12)
House renews violence act (09/27)
Clinton wants violence act renewed (9/26)
Violence in Indian Country (6/15)
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