Apart from blogging about victims’
families who want to see their loved ones’ killers but to death, also I want to
blog about victims’ rights too. I will blog about victim impact statements from
Wikipedia before giving my comments and condolences about it.
Source: http://www.justice.gov/usao/law/vicwit/vicimpact.html |
A victim impact statement is a
written or oral statement made as part of the judicial legal process, which
allows a victim of crime the opportunity to speak during the sentencing of
their attacker or at subsequent parole hearings. In some instances videotaped
statements are permitted.
Overview
One purpose of the statement is to
allow the person or persons most directly affected by the crime to address the
court during the decision making process. It is seen to personalize the crime
and elevate the status of the victim. From the victim's point of view it is
regarded as valuable in aiding their emotional recovery from their ordeal. It
has also been suggested they may confront an offender with the results of their
crime and thus aid rehabilitation.
Another purpose of the statement is to
inform a court of the harm suffered by the victim if the court is required to,
or has the option of, having regard to the harm suffered by the victim in
deciding the sentence.
In cases of crimes resulting in death,
the right to speak is extended to family members. In some jurisdictions there
are very different rules on how victim impact statements from family members
may be regarded. This is because it is seen as unprincipled that different
punishments for death are given according to the how much the victim is missed,
or conversely that someone's death is relatively less harmful if they have no
family. In the circumstance of death, some jurisdictions have described victim
impact statements from family members as 'irrelevant' to sentence but not
'unimportant' to the process: they are valued for restorative purposes but
cannot differentiate punishment for causing death.
In general terms, the person making
the statement is allowed to discuss specifically the direct harm or trauma they
have suffered and problems that have resulted from the crime such as loss of
income. Some jurisdictions allow for attaching medical and psychiatric reports
that demonstrate harm to the victim. They can also discuss the impact the crime
has had on their ambitions or plans for the future, and how this also impacted
their extended family.
Some jurisdictions permit statements
to express what they deem to be an appropriate punishment or sentence for the
criminal.
Some jurisdictions expressly forbid any
proposal or suggestion on punishment or sentencing. Among other reasons, this
is because the sentencing process is solely the domain of the judge who
consider many more factors than harm to victims. Allowing suggestions on
punishment or sentence can create a false hope of the eventual sentence and
undermine the notion of restorative justice.
In civil cases, a victim impact
statement may be used to determine how much is awarded to the plaintiff.
United States
The first such statement in the United
States was presented in 1976 in Fresno, California, although it was not passed
as law in California until 1982, possibly because of Theresa Saldana's
near-fatal attack that year.
In 1982, the Final Report of the President's
Task Force on Victims of Crime recommended that "judges allow for, and
give appropriate weight to, input at sentencing from victims of violent
crime." In 1992, the United States Attorney General released 24
recommendations to strengthen the criminal justice system's treatment of crime
victims. The Attorney General endorsed the use of victim impact statements and
stated that judges should "provide for hearing and considering the
victims' perspective at sentencing and at any early release proceedings."
In 1991, the Supreme Court of the
United States held that a victim impact statement in the form of testimony was
allowed during the sentencing phase of a trial in Payne v. Tennessee 501
U.S. 808 (1991). It ruled that the admission of such statements did not violate
the Constitution and that the statements could be ruled as admissible in death
penalty cases.
By 1997, 44 of the American states
allowed the presentation of victim impact statements during its official
process, although until 1991 these statements were held as inadmissible in
cases where the death penalty was sought.
The law varies in different states,
and while most states allow statements to be made during the sentencing phase
of the trial, Indiana and Texas allow for statements to also be made after
sentencing.
Australia
The State of South Australia enacted
law in 1988 specifically providing for Victim Impact Statements in the
sentencing process, and other States followed with legislation that either
provides specifically or generally for the tendering of victim impact
statements as part of the sentencing process.
Among current issues with victim
impact statements is their relative newness and a lack of research into their
actual effectiveness against their theoretical goals. There are occasionally
legal issues surrounding the admissibility of facts in a victim impact
statement that are materially adverse to an offender.
In the State of Queensland, the Director
of Public Prosecution guidelines require prosecutors to remove inappropriate or
inflammatory material from Victim Impact Statements prior to them being
submitted before a court to prevent any such issues.
Finland
In Finland, the victim has a right to
recommend a punishment different from the one recommended by the prosecution.
COMMENTS & CONDOLENCES:
I love the idea of Victim
Impact statements; I hope every country in the world will allow it. It is good
to confront the person who had murdered your loved one. I also find it a good
idea to at least let the public and the government know how you feel. I hope
that it will give them some comfort. Please see the example of Anthony Sowell.
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