Report Template- Domestic Violence

May 12, 2026 Uncategorized

Domestic Violence Investigation

This template is designed to assist you in gathering and organizing information needed to complete the investigation of a domestic violence report.  Obtaining the information contained herein may assist you in performing a complete investigation and gathering information vital to your report. This is NOT state specific and is not an exhaustive list.

  1. Opening paragraph: Date, time and other information important to how officer became involved (dispatched to a call, flagged down, etc.). If the deputy witnessed something to cause him/her to stop at the incident location, that fact should be included in this initial paragraph.
  • Arrival at the scene
    • If situation is still volatile, what did officer do to make scene safe, secure it, treat injuries, etc.
    • Officer’s observations: what the officer saw; what the officer heard. Appearance of the scene (overturned furniture, broken items, weapons, etc.)
    • Appearance of the victim
      • Injuries (thoroughly describe the injuries)
      • Emotional (crying, screaming, shaking)
        • Describe exactly what you witnessed. Don’t draw conclusions with words like “upset” or “agitated.”
      • Excited utterances by victim
    • Appearance of the suspect (location and demeanor; also include statements, including spontaneous statements)
    • Medical attention offered/called in case of injury to any party
    • Was the assistance of a CIT officer required?
    • Separate all parties (document)
  • Victim’s Statement
    • Relationship with the suspect
    • How did they receive their injury
    • Cause of the argument; however, when documenting, they did not cause the violence against them
    • Children/Witnesses
    • Prior history (have police been called before? Has suspect been arrested? Is there a restraining order or an order of no contact?) Confirm history via computer checks.
    • Drug or alcohol involvement by either party
    • What happened after the argument?
    • Sworn, taped statement from the victim
    • Emotional state of victim
    • Was a weapon used? What kind? Do they have access to a weapon?
    • Ask about strangulation.
  • Suspect
    • Relationship to the victim
    • Injuries – document how they received them
    • Suspect Statement/Sworn if applicable
    • Demeanor while deputies were on scene
  • Witnesses – separate first
    • Canvass neighbors to see what they may have heard/seenMake sure you locate the 911 caller, if it wasn’t the victimWhat was seen/heard
    • Relationship to involved parties or are they independent witnesses?
  • Deputy’s actions at the scene
    • Evidence gathered? Are there weapons in plain view? If PC to arrest suspect, remove firearms that belong to him/her. Statement taken? Photos taken?
      • Both victim and suspect should be photographed. The scene should be photographed as well
    • Victim notification/victim packet. Victim Advocate/notification. Computer checks on suspect/victim history.
    • Lethality Assessment
    • Victim — medical attention or shelter or refusal
  • Disposition
    • Primary or predominant aggressor determined?
      • Normally, both parties should NOT be arrested
      Arrest with or without incident? Suspect arrested / case filed / PC pending / investigation closed?
      • BOLO issued for suspect if not located. Warrant obtained? DV Unit Notified?
      Evidence submitted
    • Notification of Department of Children and Families when combatants have children present

Michael Schentrup

Captain Mike Schentrup retired in 2021 as a Bureau Commander for the Gainesville (FL) Police Department, where he had worked for almost 25 years. The majority of his career was spent in investigative units, including major case detective, gang and burglary unit sergeant, and ultimately the division commander for detectives. Captain Schentrup taught extensively in various investigative fields and is the owner/lead trainer of Advanced Police Concepts, LLC (AdvancePoliceConcepts.com). In 2020, he established the APC Online Academy, to bring the investigative curriculum to those who are unable to travel. Captain Schentrup is an accomplished instructor in both in-person and virtual formats. He is an adjunct master instructor for law enforcement for the Florida Council Against Sexual Violence and is a member of its statewide policy group. Captain Schentrup was part of End Violence Against Women’s Cadre of Experts from 2019-2023, where he instructed on trauma informed response and assisted with content development. Check out his LinkedIn here.

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