COUNTY PROSECUTOR PROTECTS VICTIM RIGHTS
On October 10, 2017, Laura A. Bischoff wrote a front page Journal-News article regarding proposed Marsy's Law which included the comment of an alleged victim who stated she pressed charges in Butler County and claimed victimization by the justice system. She claimed that as a victim "she was shocked to learn that the prosecution and defense team agreed that she should undergo a videotaped competency hearing." When I read this story I was equally shocked because my office of Butler County Prosecutor never agreed to any such request and learned that the request was made only in the Middletown Municipal Court by a defense attorney and the City Prosecutor never agreed to it nor was the motion ever acted upon by the Middletown Municipal Court Judge. The Middletown prosecutor is not employed by me and I do not prosecute in the Middletown Municipal Court. Thus, I am writing to make it perfectly clear that my office had no participation in the victim claim and further that I have one of the best victim advocacy programs in the State of Ohio. I have five full-time victim advocates who are dedicated to seeing victims though the legal process from start to finish and even after. Any suggestion otherwise can have a chilling effect on victims coming forward and when that happens - justice falls and ;the public is less safe.
Michael T Gmoser
Butler County Prosecutor
JOURNAL-NEWS article October 10, 2017
ELECTION
2017
Victims’
rights issue on ballot
Five
states already have adopted Marsy’s Law, nine are considering it.
By
Laura A. Bischoff
Columbus bureau
COLUMBUS
— When Dani Brewer pressed assault charges in Butler County in
2015, she was shocked to learn the prosecution and defense team
agreed that she should undergo a videotaped competency hearing.
Brewer
said she felt like she was being re-victimized by the court system.
With assistance from Women Helping Women and the Ohio Crime Victims
Justice Center, Brewer pushed back.
Now
50, Brewer says her experience in 2015 highlights the need for
Marsy’s Law, a proposed constitutional amendment on the statewide
ballot to beef up rights for crime victims in cases pending in the
adult and juvenile system.
“I
feel like it would have given me a voice. It would have given me a
reference point to say ‘This is not how it works.’ I mean, I had
no footing,” she said.
State
Issue 1, a proposed constitutional amendment, would give victims or
anyone harmed by a crime the right to receive notifications, give
input in court proceedings and receive full and timely restitution.
Victims also would be allowed to refuse discovery requests made by
the defense, be guaranteed privacy and reasonable protection, and
have a right to “prompt conclusion of the case.”
Henry
T. Nicholas, III, a California billionaire, is bankrolling the
campaign and the issue is named after his sister, Marsalee, who was
stalked and murdered by her ex-boyfriend in California in 1983.
Voters in California, Illinois, Montana, North Dakota and South
Dakota have adopted Marsy’s Law and the group is pushing ballot
initiatives in nine more states this fall, including Ohio.
Ohio
Attorney General Mike DeWine, a Republican who is running for
governor, is co-chairman of the campaign.
The
amendment does have opposition. Two groups that often oppose each
other — the Ohio Public Defender and the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys
Association — say state law already provides protections for crime
victims, and they argue that State Issue 1 has the potential to add
costs and delays to the criminal justice system.
Brewer
disagrees. “Clearly there is not enough in place. I had nothing. I
had to search for Women Helping Women. A mutual friend put me in
touch with the Ohio Crime Victims Justice Center. It’s just an
additional layer of protection. What’s wrong with that?”
Among
others backing the amendment are the Buckeye Sheriff’s Association,
the Ohio Fraternal Order of Police, and 13 individual county
prosecutors.
Serious
flaws?
The
Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association issued a two-page statement,
outlining what it sees as serious flaws with the proposed amendment.
One
is that it says the issue is so broadly defined it’s not clear
whether victims would be eligible for the taxpayer-funded counsel now
available only to indigent defendants.
“Marsy’s
Law places victims on equal footing with defendants,” said Lou
Tobin, executive director of the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys
Association. “If this is so, one possible unintended consequence is
that the victim could have the right to an attorney. The OPAA feels
that this is unnecessary, will create delays and disruptions, and
could prove expensive to the taxpayer if it is determined that
indigent victims have the right to appointed counsel.”
Ohio
Public Defender Tim Young said the issue would allow victims to
refuse the defense’s request for evidence, documents and testimony
in some circumstances.
“Issue
1 conflicts with essential guarantees in the Bill of Rights,
including double jeopardy, confrontation and speedy trial — rights
fundamental to our founders,” Young said. “This amendment will
result in increased litigation, increased costs to taxpayers, and
will delay cases, only hurting victims.”
Laws
not enforced
Marsy’s
Law Ohio campaign spokesman Aaron Marshall said existing protections
for crime victims aren’t uniformly applied across the state. “The
reality of it is, it’s not being enforced,” he said.
The
proposed constitutional amendment would put victims and defendants on
equal footing and give victims the right to a prompt conclusion of
the cases, he said.
“Crime
victims want cases to wrap up,” said Marshall. “They want to move
on with their lives.”
Marshall
objected to some of the comments about the amendment’s impact,
saying victims who are indigent won’t be entitled to appointed
counsel, as stated by the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association. He
also denied the amendment would interfere with the right to appeals
for people convicted in death penalty cases, which has been suggested
by some.
Advocates
for Marsy’s Law are mounting a serious campaign, including multiple
television commercials that feature crime victims who feel they were
mistreated or unheard.
‘The
No. 1 thing’
After
his sister’s murder, the Cincinnati-born Nicholas became a vocal
supporter of victim’s rights, beginning in California, where voters
approved Marsy’s Law in 2008.
In
Ohio, Nicholas has bankrolled the Marsy’s Law campaign, shelling
out $2.9 million of the $3 million raised. Forbes.com this
year estimated that Nicholas, the co-founder of Broadcom Corp., has a
net worth at $3.4 billion.
Application
of the laws hasn’t always been smooth. In California, it was
disrupted by federal court intervention and a long-standing
tug-of-war over prison overcrowding and criminal sentencing reforms.
“It’s
a staple in our courts now,” said Todd Riebe, president of the
California District Attorneys Association.
Riebe
is a supporter.
“The
best thing about it is it elevated victim rights to a constitutional
level. That was the No. 1 thing that it did,” he said. “There are
problems with it. They didn’t look at all the subject matter
experts and they should have. When they wrote this thing it could
have been a lot better, more clear.”
But,
he added, “Overall, I think prosecutors everywhere stand by Marsy’s
Law, regardless of their political affiliation, and adhere to it.”
Contact
this reporter at 614-224-1624 or email Laura.
Bischoff@coxinc.com.