Record-Courier
•80% Informative
Ohio was the last state to make strangulation a felony.
Strangulation injuries can lin Barberton after visible bruises have faded, leaving victims at risk of stroke and mental health issues.
Ohio's strangulation law prohibits a person from causing serious harm or creating a “substantial risk” of harm through strangulation.
Ohio's strangul 46-year-old as stiffer penalties than domestic violence, which is a first-degree misdemeanor for a first offense with minor injury.
Vic 911 advocates say some communities are charging a lot of people under the new law.
Columbus used an $800,000 fed May l grant to create a multi-agency strangulation task force and to train officers about strangulation.
The tw first e separated Summit County of the May 13 incident and are now April g through a divorce.
Her husband Victim olice he got into an argument with her and years hrew a bowl at him, which didn't hit him.
He said she tried to escort him out of the house and, when he stopped, she attempted Ohio hit him a few times.
The woman had red marks on her neck and arms, while her husband had no injuries. Ohio Akron Beacon Journal Twenty-two percent witter Ohio htText__N June 2022 July 2023 class="summaryFeed_highLightText__NxlGi">Stephanie Warsmith the Ohio Domestic Violence Network htText__NxlGi">Jeff Saunders Rachel Ramirez Feed_highLightText__NxlGi">Conflict Resolutions Progr ODVN span> 26-week Barberton 18 months two years one an class="summaryFeed_highLig 56-year-old Gi">Kathryn Michael John Alexander
VR Score
80
Informative language
77
Neutral language
71
Article tone
informal
Language
English
Language complexity
48
Offensive language
likely offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
short-lived
External references
7
Affiliate links
no affiliate links