Time for a Crime Victims’
Rights Amendment
By Paul G. Cassell*
Recently Al Gore endorsed the pending Victims’ Rights Amendment,
reminding everyone of its overwhelming, bipartisan support. The amendment’s naysayers, however, were
quick to capitalize on Gore’s backing as proving the Amendment is a mere
political gimmick. Steve Chapman, for
example, labeled the amendment as “much worse” than “a cheap exercise in
political grandstanding” (The False Promise of Victims Rights, July 25,
1999). But if anyone is posturing, it’s
those who use the guilt-by-association argument than something endorsed by --
gasp -- a politician is, ipso facto, bad.
In fact, the case for the amendment’s rests on firm legal and empirical
foundations, explaining why it commands support not only from Al Gore but a
broad congressional coalition spanning Joseph Biden to Strom Thurmond.
The amendment rests on the simple premise that victims of crime, no
less than accused criminals, merit respect throughout the criminal
process. It would confer on victims of
violent crimes the right to be notified of court hearings, to attend those
hearings and to speak on issues such as bail, plea bargaining, and
sentencing. The amendment would also
require judges to consider the victim’s interests before granting bail, delaying
trial, or denying restitution.
A victims’ amendment is no election cycle contrivance, but a long
gestating proposal stemming from the President’s Task Force on Victims of Crime
in 1982. After hearings held around the
country, the Task Force concluded that a constitutional amendment was needed
because “the fundamental rights of innocent citizens cannot adequately be
preserved by any less decisive action.”
Following on the heels of this recommendation, 31 states amended their
state constitutions to recognize victims’ rights. The citizens of Indiana, for instance, passed a victims’
amendment overwhelmingly in 1996.
The amendment’s critics, with Chapman serving as a convenient
illustration, tell us that crime victims are already “assured” their rights by
such state enactments. But these paper
promises have yet to been translated into day-to-realities. Attorney General Reno concluded, after a
full review of the issue, that the state efforts “simply are not sufficiently
consistent, comprehensive, or authoritative to safeguard victims’ rights.” A recent report from the National Institute
of Justice likewise found that “enactment of State laws and State
constitutional amendments alone appears to be insufficient to guarantee the
full provision of victims’ rights in practice.” Even in those states that offered “strong protection” for
victims, less than 60% were notified when defendants were sentence and less
than 40% were notified of a defendant’s pretrial release. The same data showed, not surprisingly, that
those most likely to be denied their rights under the current haphazard
patchwork were racial minorities.
The critics’ other lead argument -- at odds with their claim that
victims’ rights are “assured” today -- is that actually providing victims’
rights is impractical. Chapman, for
example, parades as the worst case example of the amendment’s horrific
effects the situation of a number of
customers in harm’s way during an armed bank robbery, who will have to be
notified of ensuing court hearings.
Good heavens, how terrible — keeping those who were terrorized during a
robbery informed, if they so desire, of what’s happening during the case. Of course, this can all be done quickly and
inexpensively via computerized mailing lists or automated telephone calls, as
experience in various states illustrates.
Chapman, however, has no time for fair evaluation of implementation
issues. He tells his readers “no one
seems to have bothered to estimate” the Amendment’s cost. Actually, the Congressional Budget Office
has estimated the tab for the federal system — concluding “CBO does not expect
any resulting costs to be significant.”
A system that treated victims fairly would be worth a considerable sum,
but is, in fact, an inexpensive bargain.
A final objection is that victims’ rights do not “belong” in the
Constitution. Yet, as Harvard Law
Professor Laurence Tribe has observed, the Amendment addresses the very kinds
of rights with which our Constitution is typically and properly concerned — the
rights of individuals to participate in government processes that strongly
affect their lives. The Amendment
builds on the overarching theme of the Bill of Rights — protecting citizens
against government misconduct — while enhancing the goals of the later
amendments — involving citizens in government processes. No doubt the constitutional amendments
enfranchising the newly freed slaves, women, and eighteen-year-olds were
politically popular, drawing the endorsements of the Al Gore’s of their day. But these amendments were all changes for
the better, ending the exclusion of those who deserved inclusion. The Victim’s Rights Amendment will do the
same for those who have suffered horribly at the hands of violent
criminals.
* Mr.
Cassell is a Professor of Law at the University of Utah College of Law and an
Executive Board Member of the National Victims’ Constitutional Amendment
Network.