Justice Minister Simon Power responded instantly and sensibly to the launch of the SST campaign to allow victims to give the Court their views on sentencing.
More sensibly than the new President of the Law Society. The latter could have said something like "I commend the quick response of the Minister of Justice, and I hope that the law change is thorough enough to start reassuring victims that the justice system cares as much about them as it does offenders". Instead he focussed on the threat that victims will risk arrest for contempt of court until they are no longer gagged.
There are many ways to ensure that a right to comment does not degrade the court process (bearing in mind that all this occurs after the guilt of the offender has been determined). I comment on some of the safeguards at the end of this post.
The Victim Impact Statement provisions were well meant, but in 1990 a case meant in effect that they could do little more than confirm the "loser" position of the victim, in front of the convicted offender. Instead of being part of the community’s reassurance to victims that society now stood beside them, it sucked them into reinforcing the message of the offender’s power to hurtm and their relative powerlessness, even after the conviction.
A 2007 academic paper by Peter Sankoff and Lisa Wansbrough gives a good background to the issues.
A Court of Appeal case this year (R v H [2009] NZCA 77) confirmed that the 2002 law changes did not change the way the courts should treat these statements. The Appeal judges said the High Court was wrong, for example, to allow the victim to say that the offending rapist was "cynical, predatory and manipulative in the extreme", of a rapist who groomed a young girl who came to live with his family.
I’ve waited for this campaign for a long time, since my amendments were rejected by the Select Committee on the Sentencing Bill, and then by the House, in 2002. I tried to ensure that victims had at least as much right to express themselves as that Act gave to the offender and his family and whanau.
Compare the law’s tender care of the offender in section 27 of the Sentencing Act with its grudging discretionary permission to victims in section 17 and 18 of the Victims’ Rights Act.
Many people are very surprised to learn that victim statements are routinely heavily censored. Now we know why the relatives of murder victims sound so restrained and accepting at sentencing hearings – they haven’t been allowed to say what they think. It is sad that the legal profession have quietly gone along with this travesty.