06-17-2012, 09:28 AM
That is right on about the overshadowing, leilaniguy.
Three Ainaloa-related cases in particular have made an impact on me over the years. I remember when they were in the news enough to be able to find them again.
Husband stabs pregnant wife and kills unborn son and 14 year old son.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/articl...30405.html
Boyfriend shoots mother of his child in front of their 2 year old son and burns her body.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/articl...90355.html
Daysha's diary:
http://dartcenter.org/content/dayshas-diary-1
(I had interacted with her at her job, and was at Safeway the night of the vigil and march in her name, when the store was semi-deserted because they let people go participate).
Horrible abuse of young girl from age 9 on, found in shocking condition:
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/articl...70358.html
(this is the case you mentioned).
as I raised the topic of domestic violence and that was questioned, here is a somewhat in depth article on the domestic abuse problem in the state of Hawai'i. It is not about neighborhoods, or Puna; it is Oahu-centric, but the problem is statewide. (It is about the system and its failure, not about which groups have the problem.)
http://dartcenter.org/content/crossing-l...aiÕi-homes
and here an article on child abouse in Puna (not Ainaloa), that came out of the neglect/torture case:
http://archives.starbulletin.com/2005/02...tory3.html
You are right that a few major heavy cases don't represent the whole picture by any means. OTOH, in these incidents, the troubled situation went on for some time.
I would speculate that the subdivisions with smaller lots, paved roads, utilities tend to draw different demographics than the larger parcels with poor roads and lacking utilities. The latter tend to draw farmers/people looking for seclusion and self-sufficiency. In a mainland city, a quarter acre lot is hardly small, but here it is.
(I don't include the oceanfront subdivisions (or parts of subdivisions) in that spec. It is typical to have smaller lots near the ocean because the land is so desirable.) I don't know if my spec is accurate. It is more something I wonder about and am curious what others think.
Three Ainaloa-related cases in particular have made an impact on me over the years. I remember when they were in the news enough to be able to find them again.
Husband stabs pregnant wife and kills unborn son and 14 year old son.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/articl...30405.html
Boyfriend shoots mother of his child in front of their 2 year old son and burns her body.
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/articl...90355.html
Daysha's diary:
http://dartcenter.org/content/dayshas-diary-1
(I had interacted with her at her job, and was at Safeway the night of the vigil and march in her name, when the store was semi-deserted because they let people go participate).
Horrible abuse of young girl from age 9 on, found in shocking condition:
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/articl...70358.html
(this is the case you mentioned).
as I raised the topic of domestic violence and that was questioned, here is a somewhat in depth article on the domestic abuse problem in the state of Hawai'i. It is not about neighborhoods, or Puna; it is Oahu-centric, but the problem is statewide. (It is about the system and its failure, not about which groups have the problem.)
http://dartcenter.org/content/crossing-l...aiÕi-homes
and here an article on child abouse in Puna (not Ainaloa), that came out of the neglect/torture case:
http://archives.starbulletin.com/2005/02...tory3.html
You are right that a few major heavy cases don't represent the whole picture by any means. OTOH, in these incidents, the troubled situation went on for some time.
I would speculate that the subdivisions with smaller lots, paved roads, utilities tend to draw different demographics than the larger parcels with poor roads and lacking utilities. The latter tend to draw farmers/people looking for seclusion and self-sufficiency. In a mainland city, a quarter acre lot is hardly small, but here it is.
(I don't include the oceanfront subdivisions (or parts of subdivisions) in that spec. It is typical to have smaller lots near the ocean because the land is so desirable.) I don't know if my spec is accurate. It is more something I wonder about and am curious what others think.