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January 27,
2010:
National Victims' Service
Justice Secretary Jack
Straw has
announced details of the new
National
Victims' Service in a speech at the Royal Society of Arts today. The details
of the National Victims' Service are the next stage of reforms aimed at ensuring
the justice system is on the side of the law abiding citizen.
The speech comes a week
after the latest figures showed crime continuing to fall, breaking the pattern
of previous recessions, with the lowest murder rate for a decade and the
British Crime Survey
showing the chances of being a victim the lowest since records began.
The National Victims'
Service guarantees all victims of crime and anti-social behaviour referred by
the police more comprehensive and dedicated support. The first stage will begin
helping families bereaved by murder or manslaughter from March 2010. This will
provide intensive support, care and attention, tailored to their individual
needs, beyond the conclusion of any investigation or trial.
They will be given a named, dedicated support worker, who will meet with them
regularly to identify their needs and liaise with the authorities on their
behalf. The individual may need immediate practical assistance – for example
with security, or childcare, or making bill payments – and will be helped
through all of this. Emotional support and expert assistance will also be
offered where needed – counselling, for instance, or legal and financial advice.
In view of the importance
of the the new Service, Crimlinks is
publishing the entire speech.
"I would like to begin with
a few words about Sara Payne.
Everyone here will know that Sara fell seriously ill just before Christmas."
"In her 12 months as Victims' Champion, Sara has been a powerful advocate for
the rights of victims, bringing to bear all her natural wisdom and the
experience from her terrible tragedy a decade ago. Through her recent report – 'Redefining
Justice' – Sara has made sure that victims' voices are not lost but better
heard. Sara's ideas and recommendations – born out of her own experiences and
her conversations with one thousand victims, witnesses and criminal justice
staff around the country – are enormously important. I shall return to them
later."
"I'm sure I speak for everyone here today when I say that our thoughts are with
Sara and her family."
"In my last speech to the RSA in October 2008, I asked the question: for whom
ultimately is the criminal justice service here to serve? My answer was quite
clear: it is here to serve the public; the taxpayers who fund it, the
communities protected by it. That may seem blindingly obvious, but in my
experience as Home
Secretary and now Justice Secretary, parts of the system do not always
remember this."
"However obvious, the answer has implications for how many offenders we have and
how we manage them. There was a powerful view around in the 80s and early 90s in
the face of rising crime that there was really nothing much governments could do
about it. It was all to do with external factors. There was a similar and
related view that not much could be done about schools' performance. But we have
shown in the last decade and more what defeatist nonsense this all was. A
combination of policies – especially more police and great work by them – has
turned the apparently inexorable trend around. The doomsayers were at it again
when the recession began, front page headlines claiming that crime – and
especially acquisitive crime like burglary and robbery – was bound to rise."
"The result is that crime has fallen, partly because we have both toughened and
made more intelligent our approach to offenders. They must be held to account
for their actions, but given the chance to change. As I have said: punishment
and reform."
"My answer has implications for the way we involve communities in criminal
justice. Communities are now given a say in the types of
Community Payback projects offenders carry out, and in how cash seized from
criminals is put to use. High visibility vests allow the public to see offenders
working and making amends for their behaviour. And people can go online, type in
their postcode and find out the facts about local crime and what the police are
doing. This is about improving confidence in criminal justice and making the
service more open, responsive and accountable to the public."
"The answer also has clear implications for the way we treat victims of crime. I
spoke last time of my frustrations with the criminal justice lobby's
preoccupation with the 'needs' of offenders and how I wanted to see greater
attention focused upon the needs of victims." Next
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