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Document DOJ-OGR-00023231

AI Analysis

Summary: The document analyzes the CVRA and the Department of Justice's guidelines for implementing its provisions, including the 2005 Attorney General Guidelines for Victim and Witness Assistance. It discusses the Office of Legal Counsel's (OLC) conclusion that CVRA rights commence upon the filing of a complaint and the Department's responsibilities in notifying victims of their rights during different stages of criminal proceedings.
Significance: This document provides insight into the Department of Justice's interpretation and implementation of the Crime Victims' Rights Act, specifically regarding when CVRA rights commence and who is responsible for notifying victims of their rights.
Key Topics: Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) interpretation Definition of 'crime victim' under CVRA Implementation of CVRA rights by the Department of Justice
Key People:
  • Attorney General - Responsible for developing and implementing guidelines for victim and witness assistance

Full Text

OLC concluded that because the CVRA defines "crime victim" as a 'person directly and proximately harmed by the commission of a Federal offense,' . . . the definition of victim is thus tethered to the identification of a 'Federal offense,' an event that occurs with the filing of a complaint." OLC further concluded that because the House Report stated that the CVRA codifies the "'rights of crime victims in the Federal judicial system'" and a complaint "commences the 'judicial process' and places an offense within the 'judicial system,'" the legislature must have intended for CVRA rights to commence upon the filing of a complaint. OLC also found that the language of the CVRA rights supported its interpretation. For example, the first right grants a victim protection from "the accused," not a suspect. Additionally, the second, third, and fourth rights refer to "victim notification, and access to, public proceedings involving release, plea, sentencing or parole—none of which commence prior to the filing of a complaint. B. 2005 Attorney General Guidelines for Victim and Witness Assistance In May 2005, the Department updated its Attorney General Guidelines for Victim and Witness Assistance (2005 Guidelines) to include the CVRA.269 The 2005 Guidelines specifically cited the CVRA requirement that agencies "engaged in the detection, investigation, or prosecution of crime shall make their best efforts to see that crime victims are notified of, and accorded" their CVRA rights, which in 2005 encompassed the initial eight CVRA rights. The 2005 Guidelines provided detail regarding implementation of the Department's CVRA duties and divided criminal cases into an "investigation stage," a "prosecution stage," and a "corrections stage." The individuals responsible for notifying crime victims of their CVRA rights varied depending on the stage of the proceedings. During the "investigation stage" of cases in which the FBI was the investigating agency, the Special Agent in Charge was responsible for identifying the victims "[a]t the earliest opportunity after the detection of a crime" and notifying them of their rights under the CVRA and services available under the VRRA and other federal statutes. [D]uring the investigative stage, [the Department] mandates compliance with the Victims' Rights and Restitution Act, 42 U.S.C § 10607, which requires federal officials to, among other things, identify victims, protect victims, arrange for victims to receive reasonable protection from suspected offenders, and provide The Availability of Crime Victims' Rights Under the Crime Victims' Rights Act of 2004 (Dec. 17, 2010) ("OLC Availability of Crime Victims' Rights (2010)") and available at https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/olc/opinions/2010/12/31/availability-crime-victims-rights.pdf. "That [2005] informal guidance did not foreclose the possibility that other definitions would also be reasonable." OLC Availability of Crime Victims' Rights (2010) at 1. 269 The 2005 Guidelines are set forth in relevant part in Chapter Three, Part Two, Section II of this Report. The Department promulgated the guidelines in response to a congressional directive in a predecessor statute to the CVRA, which instructed the Attorney General to develop and implement such guidelines. Victim and Witness Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 97-291, § 6, 96 Stat. 1248 (1982). The 2005 Guidelines were superseded in October 2011, as explained below. 193