Otago Daily Times

Pandemic delays court, ‘distressin­g’ for victims

- JIMMY ELLINGHAM

WELLINGTON: Lockdowns and other Covid19 restrictio­ns have caused almost 150,000 court appearance­s to be delayed during the pandemic, often forcing victims to put their lives on hold while they await justice.

Court officials now face clearing the backlog, and said they have adapted to allow more hearings to go ahead as the pandemic grinds on.

That’s little comfort to Auckland woman Rosie Veldkamp. The man who raped her was supposed to be sentenced in September last year.

It was reschedule­d to October, November, January and March before finally happening in April, after delays mostly caused by Covid19.

‘‘It was super hard,’’ Ms Veldkamp said of the delays, each one falling after she had told herself her court ordeal was almost over.

‘‘There was, obviously, a massive leadup every single time we were told it would happen, and you didn’t know what to expect — you haven’t been in that kind of situation before.

‘‘The twoyear leadup just makes it so much scarier.

‘‘There was so much more time to think about what was going to happen. The idea of seeing him [the rapist] in person was terrifying.’’

That twoyear leadup was from the time of the offence until sentencing — about double the 12 months’ home detention her rapist must serve.

Veldkamp’s case is one of 142,000 ‘‘court events’’ that have been put off due to Covid19 since March 2020, according to figures released by the Ministry of Justice.

Court events cover appearance­s across the High Court and district courts, such as sentencing­s, bail hearings, Family Court proceeding­s and trials.

The ministry said the delayed cases are from a total of 1.98 million court events scheduled during that time.

Ms Veldkamp was helped through the court hearings by victims’ advocate Ruth Money, who is calling on court officials to clearly communicat­e a plan about how the problem will be solved.

‘‘From a survivors’ perspectiv­e it seems that the Ministry of Justice, and the courts’ part of it, really was quite slow to act.

‘‘We still don’t really see a solid plan as to how we’re going to move through all of this backlog,’’ Money said.

‘‘I think that’s the most distressin­g thing: How is this inordinate wait going to be addressed so we can help these people with their mental distress?’’

Delays with cases were taking their toll on people in the frontlines of the justice system, as anxiety levels rose.

‘‘Most survivors I work with, their life is on hold until their court date or the court process is finished, so it’s very tricky to concentrat­e on work, live your life and flourish as you should because you’re constantly triggered and you’re anxious, waiting for a court date.’’

Ms Money and others in the justice system said more resources were desperatel­y needed.

Criminal Bar Associatio­n vicepresid­ent, Gisborne lawyer Adam Simperingh­am, said before the pandemic the ministry did a good job in balancing the demands of budgeting and access to justice.

‘‘Covid has obviously exacerbate­d those delays and made things really difficult.

‘‘I don’t really know what the solution is, short of getting more judges, more courtrooms and staff to get through the backlog,’’ he said.

‘‘I understand the Ministry of Justice is working on that.

‘‘They’re obviously acutely aware of it and I don’t think there’s any solution available, short of throwing a lot more money at it, and perhaps that money is better spent in other sectors of society.’’

In a statement, ministry chief operating officer Carl Crafar said since March 2020 courts had kept operating as an essential service.

Protocols set by the judiciary outlined which court proceeding­s took priority during the pandemic. Jury trials were suspended several times, although they were happening at the Omicron Red and Orange settings.

As the pandemic continued, courts adapted to allow more hearings to go ahead, such as with increased used of audiovisua­l links.

During the March 2020 Alert Level 4 settings only 32% of scheduled court appearance­s happened, while at Omicron Red and Orange that rose to 92%.

The Government had pumped in $40 million for more judges, while work was happening to make sure cases went ahead. — RNZ

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Ruth Money

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