LGBTQ survivors of domestic violence still face discrimination when they ask for help
LGBTQ survivors of intimate partner violence continue to face barriers when they seek help, including hostility from police and being turned away from shelters, according to The National Coalition of Anti-Violence Projects’ annual report.
The report, LGBTQ and HIV-Affected Intimate Partner Violence for 2015, was released today and found that 44% of survivors trying to access emergency shelters were turned away. Of those turned away, 71% said it was because of their gender identity. Of survivors who tried to report incidents of intimate partner violence to law enforcement, 25% said police were either indifferent or hostile and 31% said they themselves were mistakenly arrested when they tried to report that they had experienced abuse.
The report was based on surveys of 1,976 survivors of intimate partner violence at 17 NCAVP member organizations from 14 states, including Arizona, California, Colorado, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas, Virginia, and Vermont.
These experiences with police are in line with data from the NCAVP’s annual hate violence report released earlier this year, which found that the number of LGBTQ people reporting crimes to the police dropped from 54% in 2014 to 41% in 2015, and that 80% of those who did report to police were treated with hostility or indifference.