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Extracted Text (OCR)
2014] CRIME VICTIMS’ RIGHTS 63
to a potential criminal of his rights, they can do the same for his victims.
This Part also notes that the Department of Justice and state prosecutors
already successfully provide rights to victims before charging. This
successful experience strongly suggests that providing rights to victims
early in the criminal justice process will not be unduly burdensome.
I. THE ISSUE OF RIGHTS FOR CRIME VICTIMS DURING CRIMINAL
INVESTIGATIONS
To consider the question of whether victims should have rights during
criminal investigations, some understanding of the underlying purposes of
victims’ nghts enactments will be useful. These enactments are typically
designed to make victims participants in all phases of the criminal justice
process.° Congress drafted the CVRA, for example, broadly to make crime
victims participants in criminal cases. The Jeffrey Epstein sex abuse case
demonstrates the importance of victim participation even before charges are
filed.
A. A BRIEF HISTORY OF CRIME VICTIMS’ RIGHTS
The crime victims’ nghts movement has sought to make crime victims
important participants in the criminal justice process. The movement began
in the wake of the Warren Court revolution, which extended new rights to
criminal defendants.’ With the courts paying increasing attention to
criminal defendants, crime victims’ advocates began to argue that the
victims themselves had been overlooked.’ The movement gained great
visibility in the early 1980s when President Ronald Reagan appointed the
President’s Task Force on Victims of Crime.” The Task Force published a
report concluding that “the criminal justice system has lost an essential
balance.... The victims of crime have been transformed into a group
oppressively burdened by a system designed to protect them. This
oppression must be redressed.”!°
The Task Force chronicled how crime victims were treated in all
stages of the criminal justice process, from the police investigation through
6 See DoucLAs E. BELooF, PAUL G. CASSELL & STEVEN J. Twist, VICTIMS IN CRIMINAL
PROCEDURE 3-39 (3d ed. 2010) (describing reforms from a historical perspective), see also,
e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 3771(a) (2012).
T See BELOOF, CASSELL & TWIST, supra note 6, at 3-39 (describing the history of
victims’ rights in American law and the early days of the modern movement).
8 See, e.g., William F. McDonald, Towards a Bicentennial Revolution in Criminal
Justice: The Return of the Victim, 13 AM. CRIML. REV. 649, 651-55 (1976).
° Exec. Order 12,360, 47 Fed. Reg. 17,975 (Apr. 27, 1982); see also PRESIDENT’s TASK
FORCE ON VICTIMS OF CRIME, FINAL REPORT, at i1 (1982).
10 PRESIDENT’S TASK FORCE ON VICTIMS OF CRIME, FINAL REPORT, supra note 9, at 114.
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