Lodi News-Sentinel

Crime victims’ rights campaign faces backlash

- By Sean Murphy

OKLAHOMA CITY — After his sister was slain and his mother ran into the accused killer, out on bail, in a grocery store a week later, California billionair­e Henry Nicholas became a fierce advocate for the rights of crime victims.

He donated millions from his fortune as co-founder of tech giant Broadcom to create a socalled “crime victims’ bill of rights”— dubbed Marsy’s Law after his slain sister Marsalee — and add it to the state’s constituti­on in 2008.

Now Nicholas is taking his crusade nationwide, with teams of lobbyists, public relations firms and high-powered political strategist­s converging on other state capitols for a similar push. But while the idea of standing up for crime victims is an easy sell politicall­y, complaints are mounting that the initiative is becoming a testament to the danger of unintended consequenc­es.

Not just defense lawyers, but some local prosecutor­s, police and victims’ advocates are concerned that the law’s extensive victim-notificati­on requiremen­ts could impose crippling costs and administra­tive burdens on smaller towns and counties with limited resources. Supporters maintain those complaints are exaggerate­d and that any increased workload is worth the benefit of helping crime victims.

Still, law enforcemen­t and victims’ advocates in some places are calling for its defeat or reversal.

“Our local government does not have enough money to operate and protect victims adequately already. Now we have these unfunded mandates that are coming through Marsy’s Law to local government­s without the resources to pay for them,” said Leo Gallagher, county attorney in Lewis and Clark County, Mont.

Montana passed the measure in 2016, but the state’s Supreme Court recently tossed it out citing flaws in how it was written.

Marsy’s Law requires that crime victims be notified and heard in most criminal proceeding­s, receive protection and “full and timely” restitutio­n and be allowed to confer with prosecutor­s. It also expands victims’ privacy rights and prohibits “unreasonab­le delay” of criminal cases.

The measure has been approved by voters in six states — California, Ohio, Illinois, Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota — and efforts have been launched in at least nine more.

Skeptics are trying to push back.

“When we first heard about it, we thought it was a nobrainer,” said Darla Juma, who runs the victims’ witness assistance program in two counties in North Dakota, where the ballot measure passed last year. “But there are counties that don’t have a victims’ advocate, and now they’re having to send notices, notify victims. Who’s going to pay for that work?”

Some prosecutor­s complain that the requiremen­ts are especially impractica­l for white collar cases with large numbers of victims, such as securities frauds involving thousands of stockholde­rs.

 ?? IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Broadcom co-founder Henry Nicholas addresses a news conference after a federal judge dismissed drug traffickin­g charges against him on Jan. 28, 2010, in Santa Ana.
IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES Broadcom co-founder Henry Nicholas addresses a news conference after a federal judge dismissed drug traffickin­g charges against him on Jan. 28, 2010, in Santa Ana.

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