For over 20 years, I served as against the law sufferer advocate in King County, standing alongside survivors and households within the aftermath of a few of the most critical violent crimes conceivable. I’ve sat with devastated, grieving dad and mom because the individual charged with murdering their youngster was arraigned in courtroom. I’ve stood on the bedside of assault victims clinging to life in hospital rooms. I’ve supported family members of murder victims as they delivered heartfelt sufferer influence statements earlier than sentencing judges. I’ve witnessed firsthand the insufferable ache, paralyzing grief and deep trauma skilled by crime victims and their households.
Over the course of my profession, I advocated for 1000’s of people and households within the pursuit of justice — making an attempt to assist navigate the complexities of regulation enforcement investigations, the legal justice system and connecting them with help providers like trauma counseling, help teams and nonprofit advocacy organizations. In 2023, I made the tough determination to go away the work I liked as a result of I may not be part of a system that persistently handled victims with indifference, disrespect and a disturbing lack of compassion. I outlined my causes in a Seattle Occasions op-ed: “Why I can no longer work on behalf of crime victims.”
Two years later, we’re lastly — perhaps, probably — starting to see indicators of progress. I’m cautiously hopeful that the pendulum is beginning to shift again towards a extra balanced, victim-centered method.
Final month I attended King County’s first ever Summit on Crime Survivors. The Summit’s goal was to amplify survivor voices and have interaction policymakers in taking a look at options to enhance help programs by figuring out service gaps and driving actionable change. This long-overdue gathering lastly positioned victims, survivors and their households on the heart of the dialog. Individuals stuffed the room, actively listening and speaking about what victims of crime want and the way programs have persistently failed them.
Survivors spoke with braveness and honesty about their experiences — describing how they felt silenced in courtrooms, retraumatized by establishments meant to guard them, and left with out entry to trauma remedy or help networks. Many times, they shared how the justice system persistently prioritized defendants over their wants and the way trauma remedy and help networks are nearly nonexistent. Their tales, whereas deeply private, echoed a broader and troubling sample and one that’s backed by information. Underneath the earlier King County government’s management, solely 14% of a $63 million justice-related price range was allotted to providers for victims and survivors. The remaining 86% was directed towards applications for people “impacted by the legal authorized system” — a time period more and more used to seek advice from legal defendants. who else is actually impacted? Crime victims, first by the trauma of the crime itself, after which secondarily by the legal justice system that treats them as an afterthought, providing little help, compassion or significant alternative to be heard.
This stark imbalance is greater than a budgetary oversight; it displays a systemic failure to heart these profoundly affected by the devastating impacts of violent crime. Whereas thousands and thousands have been funneled into offender-focused initiatives, essential assets for survivors have steadily disappeared. Victims are too usually left with out the trauma-informed care and long-term help important for therapeutic. Regardless of their central function within the justice course of, survivors have been persistently sidelined and left with nowhere to show.
When somebody commits against the law, it’s an intentional act — it’s a individual making a deliberate alternative to harm and trigger hurt to a different. The offender does one thing to somebody; the sufferer is the one who has one thing accomplished to them. But in recent times the narrative has turn out to be distorted. Whereas it’s true that many people who have interaction in legal habits have skilled trauma themselves, the narrative that “damage folks damage folks” shouldn’t be used as an excuse for legal habits. Whereas many individuals have skilled trauma, together with antagonistic childhood experiences, the overwhelming majority don’t go on to commit acts of violence.
Lately, crime survivors, particularly those that search justice and accountability from the one who selected to inflict violence, are too usually portrayed as the issue, as if wanting accountability makes them the “unhealthy man.” If a survivor needs a defendant to be held in custody or pay monetary restitution, they’re usually unfairly portrayed as unforgiving and failing of their therapeutic journey. Grief and therapeutic are deeply private and complicated. There isn’t a single path, no proper or incorrect option to navigate it. Nobody has the correct to inform against the law survivor how they need to suppose, really feel or heal.
As voters put together to elect a brand new King County government, I urge you to consider crime victims. Which candidate will acknowledge the ache and lasting influence crime victims, survivors and their households endure? Who will take significant motion, not simply supply phrases? King County deserves a county government who shall be a accountable steward of taxpayer {dollars}, not somebody who arms out clean checks to politically related, offender-focused organizations with little oversight or accountability for the way funds are spent or who’s operating these applications. A few of these issues had been mentioned within the Dec. 19, 2024, Seattle Occasions editorial “More bad news for King County violence-prevention programs.”
The following county government have to be somebody who is not going to flip away from the exhausting truths, who will prioritize victims, not with lip service, however with funding, management and dedication. I do know the profound harm a human can inflict on one other. I additionally know that with the correct help, persons are able to exceptional resilience and therapeutic. With management that understands this, the impacts of violence could be lessened and restoration made doable.
King County can not afford indifference. Now’s the time to elect a frontrunner who will deal with crime victims, survivors and their households with dignity, prioritize their wants and make significant investments that mirror the values of our group. Fourteen p.c is not going to suffice.