How to obtain support and exercise your rights as a victim

Introduction

Being the victim of a crime is often a dramatic and overwhelming event. However, there are a number of organisations that give support to people in your situation (see below). Victims also have some specific rights laid down by the VICTIMS’ RIGHTS ACT 2002.

Important provisions affecting victims are also contained in the SENTENCING ACT 2002, which provides for offenders to pay compensation, or "reparation", to victims, and in the PAROLE ACT 2002, which sets out victims’ rights to have input into decisions about the release of offenders from prison.

When you first make your complaint to the Police, they should tell you what the likely process will be for investigating the offence and prosecuting the offender. They will also put you in touch with Victim Support (see below), who will guide you through the investigation and any later court process.

When you first go to the Police you’ll need to make a statement setting out your version of what happened. If charges are laid and the offender pleads Not Guilty, you may have to give evidence in court as a witness (see How to appear as a witness).

What organisations can I turn to for support as a victim?

Who decides what charges are to be laid?

The Police decide whether or not to lay charges against the offender, not you the victim. If you believe that the Police are not investigating the case properly, or that they should be laying charges but aren’t doing so, you can complain to the Police Complaints Authority (see How to complain to the Police Complaints Authority).

What rights do I have as a victim?

Under the VICTIMS’ RIGHTS ACT 2002 all victims have a number of specific rights:

Do I get a chance to have input into the court process?

Yes, as a victim you’ll have a number of opportunities to do this:

Will I be notified if the offender is released or escapes?

Victims of certain serious offences have the right to ask the Police to place their name and contact details on the "Victim Notification Register". They’ll then be told if the offender is released or escapes. This applies to you if you’re the victim of a rape or other serious assault, or if you or someone else were seriously injured by the offence, or if you have ongoing fears about your own safety or that of your immediate family.

Being placed on this Register means that you’ll be notified:

If you want you can appoint someone else, a "representative", to receive these notices. This might be, for example, a person from Victim Support (see above). You’ll need to appoint them in writing.

Can I have input into decisions about parole and conditions of release?

You’ll be able to do this if you’re on the Victim Notification Register (which, as explained above, applies only to victims of certain serious offences). The Parole Board must then notify you if it’s about to consider releasing the offender from prison on parole or on home detention, or to consider what conditions should be imposed if the offender is due for release. You’ll have the opportunity to tell the Parole Board about your views. This right is contained in the PAROLE ACT 2002.

The Parole Board may or may not decide to hold a full hearing. If it does, you’ll be allowed to attend and say what you think. If it doesn’t hold a hearing, you’ll still have the right to have an interview with one of the members of the Board and tell him or her what you think.

Can I get compensation for the crime?

What can I do if my rights as a victim are breached?

The VICTIMS’ RIGHTS ACT 2002 specifically requires that you be dealt with courteously and respectfully, and that you must have access to services that are responsive to your needs. But these are not legal rights that you can enforce in the courts. They are merely guiding principles for people working in the justice system and in other state agencies who come into contact with victims of offences.

All the other, more specific rights in the Act do create legally enforceable rights, and therefore technically could be the basis of a legal action. But a court or tribunal would be limited in what it could do: it cannot award you money as damages or compensation for a breach of these rights unless you could have been awarded it anyway under a different law. For example, the Human Rights Review Tribunal can’t award you compensation for a breach of your rights under the Act unless the breach involved an interference with your privacy and therefore would justify compensation anyway under the PRIVACY ACT 1993.

The VICTIMS’ RIGHTS ACT 2002 also specifies that if one of your specific rights under the Act have been breached, you can complain to:

Cautionary notes