SPIP Advocates

What Is the Role of a SPIP Advocate?

Our advocates help you understand the dynamics of domestic abuse:
  • Assuring you that the abuse is not your fault
  • Emphasizing that you did not cause nor do you deserve abuse — no matter if you have struggles with addiction, unemployment or mental illness
  • Explaining that the abuse was consciously used as a tool to gain power and control over you
  • Clarifying the range of abusive and controlling behaviors
  • Underlining that within the context of what you have had to endure, the array and depth of feelings and reactions you are experiencing are normal
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SPIP Advocates Work Within These Principles:

Our Advocates Affirm Your Personal Rights To:

  • Live free from violence and be safe in your own home
  • Be treated with respect and valued
  • Be the expert on your own life, and when presented with options and the support and protections needed to safely pursue those options, you have the right to and are capable of determining your own choices
  • Have absolute control over any information you share with us
  • Obtain the support, resources and justice you deserve
  • Keep your personal feelings toward the abusive partner
  • Act in your own self-defense (acts of self-defense and domestic abuse are entirely different things)
In addition, you have legal rights under Minnesota state law throughout the court process:
  • Receive notification of the prosecutor’s decision to dismiss the charges or not prosecute the abusive person.
  • Retain your job and not be disciplined because you have been subpoenaed or were requested to appear in court.
  • Submit a victim impact statement to the court and request restitution for out-of-pocket expenses related to the crime.
  • State your opinion, orally or in writing about plea bargain agreements and sentencing.
  • Be informed of the release of the abuser from jail.
  • Seek protection through family court, which issues Orders for Protection