
photo: courtesy/national stalking law reform
AWARENESS: Stalking issue is highlighted during month of January
(PRN) LOUISVILLE ,
Ky. , January. 8, 2014 -
Every year more than six-and-a-half million people in the U.S. are
victims of stalking. That's just one of many sobering facts about stalking in
this country, including:
- 1 in 6 women and 1 in 19 men have been stalked during their lifetime
- 66% of female stalking victims are stalked by a current or former intimate partner
- 46% of stalking victims experience at least one unwanted contact per week
- 1 in 8 victims lose time from work
January is National Stalking Awareness Month, an annual push
to focus attention on stalking that was launched ten years ago by the National Center for
Victims of Crime.
"Combating stalking and the violence that too often
results from it is one of the reasons Appriss exists," said Appriss CEO Michael
Davis.
"The company traces its roots to our VINE® (Victim
Information and Notification Everyday) program, which lets crime
victims check on the status of their offender and register to be
notified about any change in that status. Many times stalkers are people who
committed a previous crime against the victim and begin stalking the victim
after they are released from jail.
With VINE, victims have the opportunity to take safety
precautions."
VINE was created after the 1993 murder of Mary Byron, a Louisville , KY woman
who was stalked, ambushed and shot to death by an ex-boyfriend who had been
jailed for raping her and later released without her knowledge.
Another component of VINE will alert individuals who take
out a protective order when that order is served, again allowing them to put a
safety plan in place if necessary.
Appriss also provided the initial funding to launch the Mary Byron Project,
a non-profit organization dedicated to ending domestic violence, which all too
frequently is accompanied by stalking.
Additional information about stalking is also available at www.stalkingawarenessmonth.org.
Appriss helps keep communities safe and informed by using
innovative technology to provide a suite of products that: inform crime victims of an
offender's status (VINE® and VINEmobile™); help police catch
criminals (JusticeXchange®); improve traffic safety and
make crash reports available online (BuyCrash.com); and prevent the illegal
sale of pseudoephedrine to
help reduce the number of meth
labs(NPLEx™).
Appriss also provides a smartphone app for sheriffs'
offices to help them communicate more effectively with their
communities. The MobilePatrol™ app is provided at no cost to sheriffs who offer
VINE.
For more information visit www.appriss.com.
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