ST. CLOUD – Once a week, a group of men file into a courtroom in Stearns County to take part in a legal rarity: a court for domestic abusers.
One by one, they answer the judge's questions about their case, share job or family news and get a fresh reminder of what the court expects of them. A probation agent provides an update, and after a few minutes of conversation, the judge says: "See you next week."
The meetings might lack Hollywood drama, but in the fight to stop men from killing their partners, they've made a difference.
"This is homicide prevention," said Stearns County Attorney Janelle Kendall.
The weekly hearings are one facet of the Stearns County Domestic Violence Court, a novel program that was recently recognized by the U.S. Office of Violence Against Women as a "mentor court'' where other jurisdictions could learn useful lessons.
The project, created six years ago under Kendall's leadership, oversees 40 to 60 felony domestic abusers at a time, picking the worst cases for review. In addition to special court hearings, the program employs a special surveillance officer to monitor the men's whereabouts and an array of services to build trust with victims.
The main goal: simply to enforce rules and court orders that domestic abusers so often ignore.
Such courts first sprang up in the 1990s, and while there are now as many as 300 across the nation, they're still fairly new to the Upper Midwest. The courts have been shown to improve offenders' compliance with court orders and, in the case of Stearns County, have helped officials intervene more quickly with children in danger and build a stronger safety net for victims.