>> so i just want textis texti our chief of victim services if we have a dedicated worker, and we don't, but particularly within hate crimes, we don't have a dedicated advocate or a dedicated lgbt advocate. >> supervisor sheehy: so my role, when i was there, was a combined role of hate crimes and for domestic violence because domestic violence is a particular challenge. the common assumption that i found at the time, which is borne out by statistics is when you have a heterosexual domestic violence, you know, 95% of the time, i think it's a statistic, the man is the aggressor. but in 99% of the same sex situations, that's not always the case. i don't know how well known this is, but if you've done domestic violence work, you know if there's an injury, someone has to be arrested, and it's automatic. that's state law, and it also includes same sex domestic violence. and so a lot of the training that i was doing was actually trying to talk to officers about being very mindful about doing a complete investigation, looking at the types of wounds people had, defensive or offensive wounds, can