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Sad pattern of domestic violence seen in Wis. spa shooting

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The Brookfield police continue to investigate the shooting at Azana Salon and Spa in Brookfield, Wisconsin, October 22, 2012. (Photo by Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — When Zina Haughton called police for help, she usually begged them to come quickly because she was scared of her husband — only to back off her claims once they arrived.

Family members and co-workers were concerned too. In July, Zina’s sister and brother called for police to check on Zina’s well-being at her home outside Milwaukee when she failed to show up for a family function in north suburban Skokie.

But nothing came of it because Zina later assured her family that she was OK — despite a pattern of violence that escalated for more than a decade, court records indicate.

On Oct. 21, Radcliffe Haughton shot and killed his 42-year-old wife and two other women at Azana Salon & Spa in Brookfield, west of Milwaukee. Haughton, 45, injured four others in the massacre before killing himself.

Some advocates for domestic abuse victims say the system failed Zina Haughton, given that there were multiple occasions where police in their Milwaukee suburb, Brown Deer, did not take her husband into custody despite claims or evidence that he committed violence against her.

Last Friday, the Wisconsin Coalition Against Domestic Violence called for an external audit of Brown Deer police for what the group called the department’s failures in the case, including failing to follow the state’s so-called mandatory arrest law.

The circumstances that led to the rampage present a familiar pattern to police and social service workers. They describe domestic violence as complex and frustrating, yet unique to individual circumstances. And some detractors say mandatory arrest laws can do more harm than good to victims.

Some crime victim advocates also say that, although they encourage communities to address domestic violence through education, health and criminal justice systems, even the best policies don’t always stop offenders intent on doing harm.

“When situations like this happen, the gut response is, ‘This is so horrendous, what can we do so this doesn’t happen again?’ ” said Dawn Dalton, executive director of Chicago Metropolitan Battered Women’s Network. “The challenge in answering this question is, there isn’t one quick fix.”

The laws concerning domestic violence — and how police enforce them — vary from state to state, from county to county and from one police jurisdiction to the next, experts say.

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