Showing posts with label victims. Show all posts
Showing posts with label victims. Show all posts

Monday, May 7, 2007

Survivors (not victims) of crime share struggles at special forum

Black Press reporter Rochelle Baker writes of a recent public forum in Chilliwack (Canada) marking National Victims of Crime Awareness Week. The session featured a variety of presentations, including Jean Cusworth whose 19-year-old daughter Jennifer was murdered Oct. 16, 1993 and the case remains unsolved.

Although she doesn’t know if the offender ever read the letters, and they were painful to write, some good came out of them.

They brought other estranged families together, and on one occasion police read them to a offender who then confessed to the murder of a 16-year-old girl and led investigators to the body.

Cusworth said survivors of crime need to be their own advocates.

As the result of active involvement in their daughter’s case, the Cusworths went onto work with the RCMP to provide a victim/survivor perspective to their work and to assist other victims of crime.

While reading her letters, when the grief overwhelmed her, Cusworth had panelist Glenn Fleet continue reading them for her.

Flett, is an offender who spent 25 years behind bars after shooting a manager to death during a robbery at Hudson’s Bay in Toronto.

In 1982 he became a Christian and began to work with other offenders while in jail.
Committed to the concept of restorative justice with it’s goals of empowering both victims, rehabilitating offenders and a safer community, Flett went on to found LINC, Long-Term Inmates Now in the Community.

Flett said it’s important for survivors and offenders to work together because homicide impacts the whole community.

“LINC wasn’t created just for prisoners, but to connect people. I really believe offenders like myself want to be included and want to change given the opportunity. I’m not unique, but I was given unique opportunities.”

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Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Victims Coalition: Bound together by tragedy

Jesse Doiron Jr. was raised to believe that when someone needs a helping hand, offering one is the right thing to do. So in April 1983, when he encountered a couple of hitchikers on an isolated stretch of road, he pulled over and offered them a lift.
Gene Hughes of the Beaumont Journal (Texas) writes about Doiron's near death at the hands of those hitchhikers, and how it moved him to work with other victims of violent crime.His injuries required a long hospital stay:
Because his sister was a nurse, Doiron was given early release into her care. Because he had given depositions to law enforcement officials and identified Voght and Novelli through photographs, he never again saw the men who attacked him. He's often thought about making contact with them through one of the many victim-meets-offender programs, but hasn't yet done so.

"I was victimized at a time when victims weren't very important, and not a lot of consideration was given to them," he said. "I don't mean that I was treated badly. I was treated very kindly by all of the first responders, so at the end of a very bad day I felt really good about people. Now, we actually train our law enforcement to understand that there is a psychology of being victimized, and if you really want to get a victim to cooperate, you don't want to revictimi0ze them. You need to help the victim realize what has happened to him.

"A lot of what we do - groups that are helping victims understand what has happened to them -- we're trying to help the future victims," he said. "Our keynote speakers aren't always victims talking about being victimized. It's the whole community that is victimized, really. It's a continuum of pain."

Doiron now helps part of the community by volunteering with Bridges to Life, a coalition organization whose mission is to connect victims and offenders in prisons, through education and focusing on victim impact.

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