Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Changes proposed for crime victims program

Plan would overhaul handling claims

- CLAUDIA LAUER

The Justice Department proposed changes Monday to rules governing state-run programs that provide financial assistance to violent crime victims in order to address racial disparitie­s and curb the number of subjective denials of compensati­on.

The proposal from the Justice Department’s Office for Victims of Crime, a major overhaul to how states across the U.S. currently handle victims compensati­on claims, comes less than a year after an Associated Press investigat­ion exposed that Black victims were disproport­ionately denied in many states.

If adopted, the changes would bar states from considerin­g a victim’s criminal history and eliminate some of the most subjective reasons for denials in many states.

Thousands of Americans each year turn to the staterun victims compensati­on programs that provide financial assistance to victims of violent crime. The money is used to help with funeral expenses, physical and emotional therapy, lost wages, crimescene cleanup and more.

But the investigat­ion found last year that in 19 out of the 23 states willing to provide racial data, Black victims were disproport­ionately denied compensati­on. In Indiana, Georgia and South Dakota, Black applicants were nearly twice as likely as white applicants to be denied. From 2018 through 2021, the denials added up to thousands of Black families each year collective­ly missing out on millions of dollars in aid.

Thousands of people are denied compensati­on every year for often subjective reasons that scrutinize victims’ behavior before or after a crime. The study found that Black victims were nearly three times as likely to be denied for these reasons, including a category often called “contributo­ry misconduct” where programs sometimes, without evidence, accuse victims of causing or contributi­ng to their own victimizat­ion.

The proposed changes would strictly limit when a state program can deny a person for misconduct including requiring that states put into law or policy what is specifical­ly considered contributo­ry conduct and the process they use to decide if it is being applied in a denial. The proposal also clarifies that state programs should not claw back money victims receive from crowdfundi­ng sources such as GoFundMe among other changes.

The publicatio­n of the proposed rule changes opens a 60-day public comment period. It can take several months to process those comments and submit final rule changes.

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