“If It Goes Horribly Wrong the Whole World Descends on You”: The Influence of Fear, Vulnerability, and Powerlessness on Police Officers’ Response to Victims of Head Injury in Domestic Violence
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Domestic Violence and Health
1.2. Police Attitudes toward DV
1.3. Attitude Theory
1.4. Impact of Austerity on Policing DV
1.5. Present Study
- How do police officers construct attitudes towards victims of DV?
- How do police interpret and respond to stories of head trauma or symptoms of BI with victims of DV?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Design
2.2. Sample
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Analysis
2.5. Credibility Checks
2.6. Researcher Reflexivity
3. Results
3.1. Global Theme 1: Seesaw of Emotions
I’d probably say at least 75% we go, arrest the offender, male or female, and then they don’t want to press any charges or make a formal complaint, give us a statement, support the prosecution.(Rachel)
There’s only so much I can do as a police officer, which is hard because I want to do more sometimes. But I can’t make you leave that abusive partner. As much as you will sit there... I’ve sat there for hours with victims trying to get them to make that first step. Sometimes they’re the one who’s got to make that leap.(Ian)
We are not the organisation that people want to see because we are of no help to them whatsoever. We can’t direct refer, we can’t offer any clinical advice, we can’t offer any help whatsoever.(Liam)
You don’t have any training as a police officer to actually speak to someone that might be suffering a crisis. (Paul) Unfortunately, with the police officers, it’s a lot of putting a plaster on at times. We can deal with fixing the short-term.(Thomas)
It gets frustrating, because you feel like, “We’ve done our best to help you, and you’re still at risk, and it looks as though you’re putting yourself at risk.”(Jack)
I don’t get it, if I’m honest. I get a lot of things in policing; I understand why people steal things, I understand why people potentially become sex offenders—I can see the mind-set, and why people get caught up in that. I struggle with domestic violence, because on a personal level, I just don’t get it really.(Ian)
They stay for years, some of them. I understand it is really difficult for them to break free, but I can’t process why it is that difficult for them to break free.(Will)
I think it is sad in a certain extent. I think there are occasions when things are really bad where you think, I can’t think logically as to why that person would do that. Sometimes you get frustrated with that person, particularly when you are trying to help them and they don’t want to help themselves.(Liam)
Our job is to be impartial, it’s not to be judge jury and executioner… My feelings towards D… DV perpetrators myself. I hate them. I think they’re horrible people, men and women alike… My thoughts to people I nick for domestic violence. I don’t get emotionally involved because that’s not my job.
It’s frustrating when you walk into addresses and you’ll see the same people who have injuries, and you look at the bloke or the female and they’re almost cocky with it. ‘What are you going to do?’ And you just think, if I could just have five minutes, I’d kick seven bells of shit out of you, and see how you like it.(Ian)
With quite a lot of domestics, you feel like a taxi service.(Paul)
A vast majority of our calls are domestic related. And obviously, the ones that stick out in your brain are the ones that usually are significant because something horrific has happened. But actually, I’ve been to equally many that weren’t horrific, but you don’t remember all the details and all the things of those because you are going to several a day.(Emily)
It can just be really mundane, and it’s like, “Yes, you’ve had an argument, okay, here’s the process,” and you’re not thinking, you’re not challenged, and you’re just like, oh, it’s just process. No, I don’t like them.(Jack)
You know that there is an amount of paperwork that goes with that so there is always an amount of mundanity to it if it is relatively routine.(Liam)
Just by chance, two years ago I was doing just a traffic job up on X Street. She came out of the shop and said, “I remember you,” told me all about it, and just said, “I’m just so glad that I had the courage to come down and talk to you that night, and the police supported me through everything.” And that was like, well, if that’s just one person, great.(David)
There is no not genuine victim ever—but it’s the ones where it’s messier and harder to work out who’s more to blame, or who’s not to blame, or what’s gone on(Emily)
There is a blame culture but there’s also empathy you know, and we do feel genuinely sorry for people. We do feel genuinely worried for people. We also feel very worried for people who actually aren’t willing to help themselves. There’s some people who you just know you can help that night and you know tomorrow there gunna have them back and they’re going to have the living crap beaten out of them next week.(Ben)
You do get different jobs where you can see which one is a genuine victim and you feel sorry for, and you’ve got to try and not feel sorry for and just help them.(Jack)
Sometimes I think there are occasions where you have victims that may well be offenders on different days or may well play up to stuff and use what they know will happen to domestic abuse suspects to make up allegations.(Liam)
A lot of the time it’s because between couples, they use us, they know that they can ring the police and if we turn up and they say, “I want them out of my house,” then it’s as if we are there like security guards kind of thing and we do get used for that quite a lot(Rachel)
Sometimes, arresting people just because it is a domestic doesn’t necessarily mean it’s the right thing to do. It might be the first time that anything’s ever happened between them, and someone’s lost their temper because of some trivial matter and someone’s ended up getting hurt, which isn’t right, but it doesn’t mean that by taking away their liberty and arresting them.(Paul)
You get sometimes people who are highly dysfunctional. One of the big taboos about domestic violence is mutually abusive relationships, and they do happen, where you get… it sounds almost dismissive to say they’re both as bad as each other, and it’s not meant to, but unfortunately there are situations which are like that.(Michael)
It’s going to sounds terrible to say but um its true, um, but there is a real victim and a victim for the sake of being a victim. So, we have our real victims, the ones that suffer in silence. The ones that suffer abuse day in day out for a period of time. That hide it from their family, that hide injuries, that hide psychological injuries, who eventually have the bravery to come forward or approach someone and want our help.(Ben)
Most of them are. I’d say most are around drugs and alcohol.(Rachel)
Um… but a lot are (sighs) you know I think a lot what we classify as domestic abuse is very closely intertwined with mental health, substance abuse and history of abuse themselves.(Ben)
Stereotyping a bit, but generally it is male perpetrators against women.(Will)
Most of the stuff, to be fair, that I go to is arguments and it’s women who may have an injury to an eye, a black eye.(Peter)
Anyone who’s been a police officer longer than five minutes knows it’s a mistake to automatically assume that the man’s the aggressor and the woman’s the victim.(Michael)
It might be that they can’t actually leave each other. It might be that they’ve tried to leave and it made it even more violent, or they have left and they’ve found them again, or they’ve left and they just can’t cope being on their own. Some people have got poor mental health, and it might not be like mental health in terms of an actual illness, but it might be low confidence, anxiety; they can’t be on their own. Sometimes you go to the same people, but it’s a different partner, but they’re still being offended against. And it’s difficult to understand why; if you’ve removed the offender and you’re no longer with him or her, and you’re in a new relationship, why is this still continuing?(Jack)
A lot of people see that as a trouble when they go to the incidents in the first place, especially if it’s a recurrent address they’re going to and you know what the result will be before you get there, where they’re likely to not talk to you, not provide a statement, and if you arrest this person and take them away, they’ll just be coming back a few hours later and probably doing the same thing again. And a lot of people, they can’t help themselves; the police will just try and help them and help them, but if they don’t want the help, it’s not going to help them.(Paul)
The problem is, you don’t always have time to do it, and there’s a lot of supervisors who won’t prioritise having that conversation. I did, because it was something I was passionate about, and I hated hearing that black humour; I hated hearing that desensitisation and those coping strategies. I understood them all, but I just didn’t like them. So, I would have those conversations. But actually, like I say, I had to be very sensitive and careful what times, because you could feel your staff withdrawing, “Oh god” and rolling their eyes, “not that conversation again”.
3.2. Global Theme 2: Police Vulnerability
We are dealing with so much more—for instance, mental health—we are dealing with so much more of that now than we did even ten years ago, because those services have been stripped back. And we don’t want to end up in a situation where basically, and this is already going a lot, where police are picking up the shortfall of other departments.(Michael)
Sometimes we are paramedics, stabbings, shootings, whatever else that we go to, mental health, like I say, paramedics, psychiatrists, going out to children, child services, as well as trying to catch criminals. There’s only so much that we can do.(Rachel)
The problem is, as I say, because we deal with the criminal side, if you take on too much responsibility over the emergency services side, we are going to be more paramedics from then on, rather than the police officer.(Thomas)
I would be pushing the other way to say that is not the role for the police at all. The police have a defined role and if you are going to cloud that role then you detract from other areas of society. The societal expectation is that police deal with crime and bad stuff.(Liam)
I think that our job should be to deal with criminality. I’m sick to death of mediating crap.(Ben)
People will go against the victim’s wishes, because if they don’t do that, the 9 o’clock jury will have a go at them, and if something happens, they’ll be responsible for it. So, you’re damned if you do, damned if you don’t. It’s almost like that blame culture.(Ian)
When I’m in work there’s very much a blame culture so it’s constantly that, there’s that train of thought that (pause) if this isn’t done properly, I’m right up the creek without a paddle. So, there’s that constant fear that if you don’t get it right then it gunna be you in front of the coroner or you in front of a disciplinary board.(Ben)
- I:
- It is all anonymous.
- R:
- ‘Police spokesman was heard to say...’ That is what the press do!
- I:
- I am not looking to catch you out, I am just interested in your…
- R:
- That is fine. You just get in this defensive mood whenever you are being asked an opinion. I have got to be really careful what I say because the media tend to take out all the context and just keep the punchline.
Until you physically come out and you do the job, you have experienced it, you take on the emotion of the people involved, you’re getting the emotional side, people crying, screaming, erratic ones who get to each other. That is something that you can’t train for in that sort of classroom environment.(Thomas)
I don’t like it. I don’t like it at all. I’d much rather go to a theft, or anything else, really. Domestics, they’re so tricky; they’re so difficult and they’re so familiar.(Jack)
It is very easy to say, ‘Why are you with that person? Why would you go back there?’ It is very easy to say that and from a logical perspective you would always say, ‘Why would you do that?’ but you can see why people do that because everyone has been in relationships where things aren’t great—not necessarily to that standard. Things aren’t great, but you persevere.(Liam)
I think it…(sigh)…it depends, from a…from a policing perspective I’ve done this job for a long time and I’ve become almost immune to is and I disassociate myself from my profession out of work.(Ben)
I mean, if you want horrific stories, then yes, I’ve got a catalogue of them in my brain that I sleep with every night(Emily)
You put it in your box, there’s always a box for it, and you put it away. And I couldn’t with that job, so I had a little bit of counselling. And that helped, I got through it, so I’m fine now from that.(Peter)
3.3. Global Theme 3: Head Injury Is Fearful
A bang on the back of the head is going to be more dangerous than a hit to the face, because that’s where your brain is, isn’t it?(Jack)
A bang to the head’s very serious; it will kill you. It might not even kill you there and then, it might kill you afterwards.(Jack)
We have got a pathological fear of head injuries as an organisation(Will)
The one thing that can make it a bit difficult is that the person who’s received the injury can sometimes be reluctant to talk about the mechanism of injury.(Michael)
It all comes down to what policing power we have and we don’t have the power to drag people to hospital and say, “You are going”.(Rachel)
I think you’ll find that with us in general, because of the nature of the head as such, and if anybody mentions headaches, ringing in their ears, feeling a bit fuzzy or whatever, we’d call somebody.(David)
You wouldn’t dream of leaving people with a head injury, just in case. We operate very much on that ‘just in case’, because if they did and they died, you are looking at job-losing territory.(Ian)
If it goes horribly wrong the whole world descends on you.(Will)
4. Discussion
Study Limitations and Directions for Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Richards, J.; Smithson, J.; Moberly, N.J.; Smith, A. “If It Goes Horribly Wrong the Whole World Descends on You”: The Influence of Fear, Vulnerability, and Powerlessness on Police Officers’ Response to Victims of Head Injury in Domestic Violence. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 7070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18137070
Richards J, Smithson J, Moberly NJ, Smith A. “If It Goes Horribly Wrong the Whole World Descends on You”: The Influence of Fear, Vulnerability, and Powerlessness on Police Officers’ Response to Victims of Head Injury in Domestic Violence. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(13):7070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18137070
Chicago/Turabian StyleRichards, Jenny, Janet Smithson, Nicholas J. Moberly, and Alicia Smith. 2021. "“If It Goes Horribly Wrong the Whole World Descends on You”: The Influence of Fear, Vulnerability, and Powerlessness on Police Officers’ Response to Victims of Head Injury in Domestic Violence" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 13: 7070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18137070
APA StyleRichards, J., Smithson, J., Moberly, N. J., & Smith, A. (2021). “If It Goes Horribly Wrong the Whole World Descends on You”: The Influence of Fear, Vulnerability, and Powerlessness on Police Officers’ Response to Victims of Head Injury in Domestic Violence. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(13), 7070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18137070