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			| Say_hello_for_me | 02-02-2005 02:48 PM |  
 Consequences
 
	Quote: 
	
		| Originally posted by Replaced_Texan
 My guess, without looking into it further, is that people who live with each other generally have to, er, live with each other. There's often a power differential where one party is dependant on the other for food, shelter, etc, and the state wants to discourage violence between the parties.  Certainly, the abused party could (and probably should) relocate, but often that's a financial, emotional or practical impossibility.   If some random person on the street beats the shit out of you, you're in a much better position to stay away from that person in the future.  If your spouse does it, your options are more limited.
 
 |  My impression is that you can get an order of protection, requiring one person to stay from you, even if you aren't married.  The domestic battery laws do allow a few things to happen.  They allow a police department to mandate that officers take reports or make arrests, even when some dizzy broad is whimpering in a corner that "he didn't give me this black eye, i fell down".  I'm not entirely sure, but I think it sometimes allows a judge to order one person out of the house vis a vis an order of protection.  But that should still apply, regardless of whether people are married etc....
 
Which is to say, these laws are stoopid if they are trying to define protections for people in a sexual or otherwise-intimate relationship.  If the laws are to address cohabitants, they should just say so.  And anybody should be able to get an order of protection.  In fact, anybody can.  I'll bet that even includes gay people in Utah.
 
Hello
 
PS  Clubby, posted that doll story as a Chicago Tribune article yesterday.  WTF? |