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Treatment of domestic abusers shouldn't start after arrest, triple-homicide inquest told

"There is no way that we should have a response to domestic violence perpetration that relies on being arrested," a clinical psychologist testified Friday on Day 10 of the inquest.

Program treating convicted abusers understaffed and underfunded, witness says

Portraits of three women.
The Inquest into the murders of Anastasia Kuzyk, Nathalie Warmerdam and Carol Culleton made 86 recommendations. The Office of the Chief Coroner expects to hear back on the status of those recommendations in mid-February. (CBC News)

Treatmentfor men who commit intimate partner violence doesn't kick in early enough, whilesome of the programs that do existfor convicted offendersare sorely underfunded and understaffed, says an expert testifying at a triple-homicide coroner's inquest.

"There is no way that we should have a response to domestic violence perpetration that relies on being arrested," saidKatreena Scott, a clinical psychologist and director at the Centre for Research and Education About Violence Against Women and Children.

Scott was speaking Friday during the tenth day of anongoing inquest into themurders ofCarol Culleton, Anastasia Kuzyk andNathalie Warmerdam.

On Sept. 22, 2015, a man with a known history of intimate partner violence murdered all three womenin and around Renfrew County, after repeatedly breaching the conditions of his probation without reprimand.

Inquest jurors, who are hearing from experts and first-hand witnesses, are being tasked with recommending changes to policies and protocols to better protect and support survivors of intimate partner violencein rural communities in thefuture.

At the core of Scott's many recommendations was a simple message: start intervention efforts early.

"Where somebody behaves in a way that is abusive, that's demeaning or coercive or humiliating or intimidating or threatening or manipulative or violent ... start there because that's a point at which I think we can't let it be a private issue anymore," she said.

Katreen stands in front of a book shelf.
Katreena Scott is a clinical psychologist and the academic director for the Centre for Research and Education on Violence Against Women and Children at Western University. (Submitted by Katreena Scott)

Few programs exist to do that, which is why a handful of women's shelters across Canada, including one in Renfrew County, have said "screw this" and launched their own programming, Scott said.

She cited examples includingCaring Dads counselling sessions, which 145 men have completedover the past decade,and a crisis line.

"It's a good thing for Renfrewbecause most communities have absolutely nothing," Scottsaid.

Staff paying for own training

Scott then criticized one of the existing programs for treating domestic violence abusers after conviction,the 12-week Partner Assault Response (PAR) program.

PAR is so underfunded that staff who conduct its group sessions which sometimes number more than 20 men are spending their own money to improve their training, Scott said.

"They are dedicated advocates often who have been doing this work for a long time, who don't get paid very well, who could be making a lot more money doing something else, who are doing difficult work, who are doing it mostly in the evenings, who are doing it with a bunch of guys who often don't want to be there," she said.

"I don't know what we can expect from a program that has that level of funding."

Scott said PAR doesn't allow for much one-on-one counselling and she would prefer there were more sessions it was reduced from 16 to 12 in recent years, the inquest previously heard.

"[Twenty] and 22 men in a group, that's not a therapeutic program. I don't know what that is. It might be a class," she said of PAR. "But we're not actually about education. We're about change."

PAR needs to have the right information about its participants, including the risk assessments police agencies conduct regarding an abuser's potential to re-offend, Scott added.

"The police are actually supposed to send the risk assessment to the PARprogram. That doesn't happen across most of Ontario," she said.

Earlier in the inquest, an OPP officer cited what she saw as a flaw on PAR's part.

Killaloe OPPDet. Const.Stacey Solmansaid PAR has no Ontario database of participants. That meansshe has had to call dozens of PAR service providers in the province when trying to trackwhether an offender failed to attend sessions.

A wand held by someone attending the inquest features C.A.N. engraved, which represents the first letter of the three murder victims' names. (Guy Quenneville/CBC)

'Breach him'

Basil Borutski, the man convicted in the murders of Culleton, Kuzyk and Warmerdam, was previously convicted, jailed and released on probation both for threatening Warmerdam's son and brutally beating Kuzyk.

Upon each release, he was court-ordered to attend PAR but never did, offering a series of excuses documented in a review conducted by Ontario's probation and parole service after the murders. He wasn'tcharged with breaching the conditions of his probation, either.

"You want the justice system to follow up the way the justice system is supposed to, which is to breach him,"Scott said.

A probation representative is expected to testify at the inquest next week.

Deborah Kasdorff, a former managerof Ontario's Victim/Witness Assistance program, which guides victims through the court process,testified earlier in the inquest that she doesn't think Borutski would have been a good candidate for PAR anyway given his pattern of deflecting blame onto his victims.

He might have done more harm than good to other sessionparticipants, she added.

Scott said there's one benefit to reluctant participants going to PAR.

"It's a place where somebody is watching him for at least 12 weeks," she said.

Borutski, who is currently in prison, was told about the coroner's inquest and "indicated he did not want any involvement," a spokesperson for the office of the chief coroner said via email.

The inquest continues next week, with the jury potentially setto begin deliberatingon recommendationsby the end of Wednesday.