"Home Front": Spartanburg Domestic Violence Initiative Nets Another Firearms Guilty Plea in Federal Court

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"Home Front": Spartanburg Domestic Violence Initiative Nets Another Firearms Guilty Plea in Federal Court

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys on Sept. 1, 2017. It is reproduced in full below.

Columbia, South Carolina ---- United States Attorney Beth Drake stated today that Hector Tavoris Gonzalez, age 30, of Wellford, pled guilty in federal court in Greenville to a single-count indictment charging violations of felon in possession of a firearm and possession of a firearm after sustaining a conviction for a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence. United States District Judge Timothy M. Cain accepted the plea and will impose sentence after United States Probation prepares a pre-sentence report. Gonzalez has prior prohibiting convictions to include a prior convictions for domestic violence, and therefore, is prohibited under federal law from possessing firearms or ammunition. He faces a maximum sentence of ten years in federal prison and remains in custody.

Evidence presented at the guilty plea hearing established that on Sept. 11, 2016, shortly after midnight, officers with the Spartanburg Police Department (SPD) responded to Westview Blvd in reference to a man firing a gun at a woman. At the scene, the victim relayed to officers that a male, later identified as Hector Gonzalez, had a gun. A witness also told officers that they saw Gonzalez shooting a black handgun at the female victim in a parking lot. SPD recovered three.40 caliber shell casings from the parking lot. Two additional shell casings were located in the street.

In a detailed statement to SPD, the victim relayed that she and Gonzalez had gotten into an argument that led to a physical altercation. After the altercation, Gonzalez fired shots towards the vehicle that the victim was driving. Several bullet holes were observed in the vehicle. The victim also told officers that Gonzalez threw the gun aside when he saw SPD approaching. SPD searched the area and located a Glock.40 caliber pistol in the yard of a residence one house south of where the victim was contacted.

The prosecution of Gonzalez’s case in federal court is a direct result of “Home Front," a focused deterrence-based initiative to combat domestic violence led by 7th Circuit Solicitor Barry Barnette. The initiative launched in December of 2016 and has the full support and partnership of the U.S. Attorney’s Office. This case and others are being prosecuted by Special Assistant United States Attorney Jennifer Wells, who is a 7th Circuit Assistant Solicitor specially designated by the United States Attorney’s Office to handle cases from the Seventh Circuit.

Modelled after a program started in High Point, North Carolina, members of the Home Front task force began earlier this fall, meeting with representatives from every police department in Spartanburg county as well as the Sheriff’s Office. The Spartanburg County State Probation office and victim’s advocate stalwart, SAFE Homes, also serve as critical partners in this effort. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, domestic violence is a community crime problem that costs the United States over $5.8 billion every year. It is a major drain on law enforcement resources as domestic violence generates a high volume of calls and repeated calls to the same location. Domestic violence homicides make up 40-50 percent of all murders of women in the United States. Women who have experienced a history of domestic violence report more health problems than other women and they have a greater risk for substance abuse, unemployment, alcoholism, and suicide attempts.

Research shows that the repeat domestic violence offender tends to have a significant criminal history that includes a wide range of both domestic violence and non-domestic violence offenses. Most of these offenders are readily identified as they are known to the criminal justice system. The Home Front initiative exposes the repeat domestic violence offender to sanctions because of his pattern of criminal behavior. According to the 2015 Violence Policy Center “When Men Murder Women" report, South Carolina led the nation in rates of women murdered by men. Sixty-six percent (66%) of the victims were killed with a firearm and ninety-six percent (96%) of women murdered were killed by someone they knew. In Spartanburg County during the 2015 calendar year, SAFE Homes serviced 6726 victims of domestic violence. In the same time frame, the Spartanburg Police Department charged 907 domestic violence cases and the Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office charged 1068 domestic violence cases. There were fourteen (14) domestic related deaths in Spartanburg County in 2015.

Solicitor Barnette has had enough. “Domestic violence is violence, period. It continues to plague our community--so costly and harmful to families and children, persisting year after year. It is time for these offenders to get our best shot-our best efforts. That is Home Front."

United States Attorney Beth Drake agrees. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) welcome the opportunity to partner with Solicitor Barnette and state law enforcement, and to use federal gun laws to pull violent offenders who are abusing their families and loved ones out of the community. The goal is simple - stop the abuse, or swift and sure, the full force of a coordinated law enforcement effort will come to bear to stop you from abusing. Home Front takes the burden of addressing abusers from the victims and shifts it to us - a very engaged group of local, state, and federal law enforcement."

The Spartanburg Police Department and ATF investigated the Gonzalez case. Seventh Circuit Assistant Solicitor Jennifer Wells, serving as a Special Assistant United States Attorney for the U.S. Attorney’s Office, is prosecuting the case. ##

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys

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