SAVIN lives: notifying victims of their assailants' whereabouts can help prevent another crime.

AuthorHarrison, Blake
PositionStatewide Automatic Victim Information Notification

Twenty-one-year-old Mary Byron was shot to death on Dec. 6, 1993, by her former boyfriend who had just been released on bail. A few weeks earlier he had been arrested and jailed for kidnapping, stalking and raping her. Officials in Louisville, Ky., assured Mary they would notify her and her family when and if he was released from custody. Sadly, they did not. The brutal attack inspired the creation of the first automated victim identification system. Today, 23 states have Statewide Automatic Victim Information Notification (SAVIN) systems.

SAVIN is designed to ensure that victims receive the information they need to participate fully in the judicial process. By registering with the system, victims, their families and coworkers are notified when any significant event surrounding a specific case occurs.

Knowing when an assailant is being released from prison is particularly important to victims of hate crimes, stalking and rape, according to the late Representative May Ringold Whittington, a professional counselor who pushed for the system in Mississippi. "It creates a scary situation for the victims when they do not know if their attackers are behind bars or not," she said.

Victims rights advocates argue that the information is an absolute must. Indeed, nearly 40 states have solidified this right in their state codes or constitutions. States typically guarantee victims reasonable and timely notice of any public proceeding involving the crime and of any release or escape of the accused. The automation of the process provides a more accurate and efficient way to guarantee that the legal rights of the victim are honored.

In 2004, the North Carolina Criminal Justice Analysis Center evaluated its SAVIN system. The results indicated that criminal justice agencies benefited from time savings and improved community relations. Sixty percent of the agency officials who responded to the survey indicated that benefits exceeded the costs of the system.

The system, however, did suffer some shortcomings. These included a lack of public awareness, technical problems and gaps in available information. Other resistance to the SAVIN systems include cost concerns, the fact that some counties already have existing systems, and that rural communities do not have the capacity to enter data in a timely manner.

SAVIN systems require...

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