
Vol. 73, No. 9, September 
2000
Special Focus Issue - Elder Abuse
Accomodating the Elderly in Court
by Jean W. DiMotto
| Hon. Jean W. DiMotto, Marquette 1984, is a 
Milwaukee County circuit court judge. | 
A profound effect of 
the victims' rights legislation1 passed in 
recent years is the increased mindfulness of attorneys and judges to the 
needs and perspective of crime victims. The once-absent elderly victim 
now is more likely to be present during court proceedings or, at the 
very least, through the written or oral statements to the prosecutor 
that are conveyed in court. 
Accommodating Elderly Victims
With the noticeable increase in elder abuse prosecutions, judges are 
well advised to consider these environmental, case management, and 
procedural strategies to better accommodate the elderly adult victim 
while preserving the rights of the defendant (whether or not an elder). 
If judges do not consider these strategies sua sponte, counsel should 
consider requesting them whenever such strategies would be 
appropriate.
- Ensure that the courtroom is equipped to accommodate elder adults, 
especially those who are frail or have disabilities. This includes 
comfortable chairs, wheelchair accessibility, and microphones with 
volumes loud enough for people with hearing deficits.
 
- Consider the viability of conducting court proceedings in locations 
or by means that allow the participation of the homebound, bedbound, or 
hospitalized elder victim, for example, in the setting where the alleged 
victim currently is located (as is done in mental commitment hearings) 
or via video-conferencing.
 
- Be flexible in scheduling the time of day for court proceedings, 
since the capacity of older adults may fluctuate with the time of day, 
medications, physical condition, capability, and time needed to get to 
court.
 
- Take frequent breaks during court proceedings in view of the 
physical needs and diminished stamina of some elderly adults.
 
- Expedite handling of elder abuse cases. This guideline should be 
followed for any domestic violence case, but elder adults may be nearing 
the end of their lives, and if they are frail or losing their capacity 
to recall and testify about the alleged incident, give scheduling 
priority to the case.2
 
- Join3 cases of elder abuse whenever 
appropriate. Use the Circuit Court Access Program (CCAP) 
to access any other cases against the defendant involving the same 
alleged victim.) Joinder is strongly favored in the case law4 and has been found proper even when the evidence 
in one case is extremely inflammatory,5 the 
defendant asserts incompatible defenses to the joined charges,6 or the defendant intends to testify in only one of 
the joined cases.7
 
- Use pretrial orders, including nonmonetary conditions of 
bail/bond,8 to protect the elderly victim 
from further harm or intimidation (subtle or aggressive) during the 
pendency of the case. These may include no contact orders, orders to 
continue taking prescribed medication, and orders to avoid alcohol or 
illegal substances. It should be noted that elders as a generational 
group respect the authority of courts and court orders and therefore, 
accused elder abusers are likely to comply with court orders.
 
Deciding the appropriateness of pretrial orders can involve complex 
considerations in elder abuse cases if the defendant is the elderly 
spouse of the victim.9 Likewise, and perhaps 
more so, sentencing a convicted elderly abuser depends on balancing 
complex and sometimes competing interests.
Sentencing considerations
Paramount sentencing considerations are protecting victims from harm 
and holding defendants of any age accountable for their criminal acts. 
The following are additional considerations for judges and attorneys 
when appropriate sentences are being determined or apt pretrial orders 
are being crafted.10
- Is the defendant a risk to society in general, other relatives, or 
neighbors in addition to the elderly victim?
 
- If the victim wants to maintain the relationship with the abuser, 
can this be accomplished without further endangering the victim?
 
- Are temporary separate living arrangements available?
 
- Should visitation, with or without supervision, be authorized?
 
- Are interventional social services available for the abuser?
 
- Are there any other rehabilitative options for the abuser, 
especially the middle-aged child who abuses the elderly parent (for 
example, job search, job training skills, education, literacy 
training)?11
 
- Can the elder abuse victim be linked with social services?
 
- Is Adult Protective Services involved?
 
- Is an aging coalition or network available?
 
- Should the victim be encouraged to use or be referred to a domestic 
violence program or shelter, or a victim-assistance program?
 
- Can the victim be made whole as a result of sentencing?
 
- Is restitution needed?
 
- Can the victim's property be restored or returned?
 
- Can the abuser's property be attached or income garnished?
 
- Is a restorative justice program appropriate?
 
- If a probationary disposition is ordered, should the court require 
periodic court reviews to monitor abuser compliance and victim 
safety?
|
 
- Does the sentence reflect that the courts and society recognize 
elder abuse as a crime?
 
- Does the sentence of an elderly abuser indicate that the courts and 
society take elder abuse seriously? Or, does the sentence indicate that 
an elderly convicted abuser is viewed more sympathetically than the 
elderly harmed victim?
 
These last two questions are especially important for judges to 
consider when there has been abuse throughout a marriage that does not 
come to the attention of law enforcement or the criminal justice system 
until late in the couple's life. The tendency then is to question the 
victim's complicity, wonder why no professional has ever picked upon the 
possibility of abuse and intervened earlier, and to excuse the conduct 
by reasoning that punishing an elderly abuser seems futile and even 
cruel. Advocates for elderly abuse victims report that it is not 
uncommon for elderly abusers to tell their spouses that no judge is 
going to put them in jail, as a way to prevent the spouse from reporting 
the abuse.
Conclusion
As our population ages, the criminal justice system is called upon to 
meet the challenges of criminal abuse of our elders. Let us be mindful 
of our elders' contributions (regardless of whether pay was given for 
those contributions), respectful of their lives and choices, and both 
compassionate and firm in our justice when their bodily integrity has 
been unlawfully interfered with.
Endnotes
1 Wis. 
Const. art. I, § 9m; Wis. Stat. Ch. 950; Wis. Stat. 
§§ 971.10(3)(b)3, 971.095.
2 Betsy J. Abramson, 
"Procedural Innovations for Courts Handling Elder Abuse Cases." Adapted 
from Lori A. Stiegel, "Recommended Guidelines for State Courts Handling 
Cases Involving Elder Abuse," American Bar Association, 
1995.
3 Wis. Stat. § 971.12.
4 State v. Hall, 103 
Wis. 2d 125, 141, 307 N.W.2d 289 (1981); State v. Hoffman, 106 Wis. 2d 
185, 208, 316 N.W.2d 143 (Ct. App. 1982); State v. Bellows, 218 
Wis. 2d 614, 622, 582 N.W.2d 53 (1998).
5 State v. Nelson, 
146 Wis. 2d 442, 456-57, 432 N.W.2d 115 (Ct. App. 1988).
6 State v. Locke, 
177 Wis. 2d 590, 596-69, 502 N.W.2d 891 (Ct. App. 1993).
7 State v. Hall, 103 
Wis. 2d 125, 130-31, 307 N.W.2d 289 (1981); State v. Nelson, 
146 Wis. 2d 442, 455-58, 432 N.W.2d 115 (Ct. App. 1988).
8 Wis. Stat. § 969.01(4).
9 See William E. Hanrahan, Elder Abuse: A Prosecutor's View, Wis. 
Law., Sept. 2000.
10 See supra note 
2.
11 See Hanrahan, 
supra note 9.
Wisconsin Lawyer