Milwaukee Exec, gubernatorial hopeful Crowley responds to domestic violence death of Kenosha woman

Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley speaks at the first candidate forum of the campaign cycle. (Photo by Baylor Spears/Wisconsin Examiner)
Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley, who is one of seven Democrats vying for the nomination in this yearβs primary for governor,Β is calling domestic violence a βpublic health emergencyβ after learning about the killing of a Kenosha woman, Makayla Plaza, 28, allegedly by her estranged ex-husband. Plazaβs attempts to get a restraining order against her ex-husband were shot down by a Kenosha County judge.Β
In February, Plaza told the court she feared for her life and the livesΒ of her young children. But the judge denied her request for a restraining order. Markus Plaza, her 33-year-old ex-husband, was taken into custody after a 24-hour man-hunt following her death on April 1 TMJ4 reported that law enforcement found the man, Marckus Plaza, hiding in the basement of a salon.Β
Makayla Plazaβs boyfriend said that her ex-husband would take her keys from her, lock her inside the house, and listen in on her phone calls. The Kenosha Police Department said that the husband had a history with the department, including an arrest for battery in February which resulted in no charges being filed.Β
In a statement released through his campaign, Crowley said that βI have been sitting with this since I heard the news because I am also grieving,β recounting how his own friend Nancy Metayer β vice mayor of Coral Springs, Florida β was allegedly killed by her husband just days ago. Metayer was soon to announce her campaign to run for Congress. βTwo women. Two states. The same devastating, preventable outcome. How many more?β Crowley said in his statement.
βI need Wisconsin to understand that this was not a fluke,β Crowley said. βThis was not an isolated failure.β Rather, he said, tragedies like Plazaβs death are the result of underfunded shelters, understaffed courts and setting the legalΒ bar for protection βso impossibly high that a woman has to prove she is already in danger before we will act to prevent it.β He called for treating domestic violence as βthe public health emergency it is.βΒ
Wisconsin has the tools and research it needs to make a difference, Crowley said, as well as the expertise ofΒ social workers, survivors and advocates. βWhat we have lacked β what Wisconsin has lacked for too long β is the political will to act,β he added.Β βI am done waiting.β If he is electedΒ governor, he said, tackling domestic violence would be a priority, including changingΒ how restraining orders are processed statewide, ensuring that survivors and their families have legal assistance and investing in mental health and substance use disorder treatment, as well as in domestic violence prevention and crisis support programs in all 72 counties.Β
βSo to the women of Wisconsin who are living this right now β I see you,β said Crowley. βIf you are afraid, if you are trying to find a way out, if you have asked for help and been turned away or doubted or made to feel like what is happening to you isnβt serious enough β I want you to hear this directly from me: You are believed. What is happening to you is real. You deserve a system that fights for your life the way you are fighting for it every single day.βΒ
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