Archive for August, 2008

Patricia’s Contribution Challenge

August 24, 2008

Patricia Wenskunas and Founder / CEO of Crime Survivors, Inc., asks you to show your support for all victims of crime and to allow all of our voices to be heard and to be allowed rights as a victim.  
 
Patricia starts this contribution challenge with $100.00.
Let’s see how much we can get this challenge up to. 
Pass onto friends and family also. Get involved….

We would not want anyone to have to endure the pain, suffering or experience of being a victim of a crime or to be told sorry you have no rights and you went from being the victim to the witness in the courts eyes. If this ever happened to you, a family member, a friend or a co worker wouldn’t you want to have rights in the legal system?

Join Forces and show your support. Match Patricia’s contribution or choose an amount that your budget will allow if it is more — great, if it is less — that is also great. Any and all amounts are appreciated and accepted.

VOTE YES ON PROP 9 – MARSY’S LAW


Contact Patricia to meet her challenge at crimesurvivors@aol.com or at (949) 872-7895.

Letter to Editor by Genelle and Jack Reilley LA Times “High Court Sides With Parolee”

August 24, 2008

We read your article with disbelief and shock, then sadness. Justices George, Kennard, Werdegar and Moreno made a horrible, insane decision that is an outrage to all homicide survivors and a gross insult to all murder victims.
There are so many things wrong with this decision. Here are just a few.

…The U.S. Supreme Court noted that 90% of all prisoners are found unsuitable for parole, while 85% are found unsuitable at the second and subsequent hearings. Justice George trashes this finding, apparently determining that there are “good” murderers. Sandra Lawrence is the jurist’s example, she viciously murdered a woman without provocation then escaped arrest for eleven years.

…The Justices think it wonderful that Lawrence used state resources to educate herself and used her time productively. In their decision these actions make a murderer worthy of parole. The victim is still dead. Will the Justices give living victims and homicide survivors a parole from the life sentence of loss and suffering given them by “good” murderers?

…The Justices say the viciousness of the crime is not important, not to them anyway. What a insulting, warped, evil opinion. Apparently victims and survivors mean nothing to these judges, its all about the welfare of the murderer. To them it is all about the process, no consideration of the crime or the victim.

…The Justices have sent a message to all prisoners that they can “game” the judicial process and that George and the others can be rolled.

…Justice George has usurped the authority of the Governor to protect society by denying parole to vicious killers, rapists, pedophiles and molesters. Fortunately Californians can get rid of arrogant, wrong headed jurists. Remember Rose Bird.

Thank you for reading.  
Genelle and Jack Reilley

Our daughter, Robbin Brandley, was murdered at Saddleback Community College in Mission Viejo in 1986. Her murder is not solved.

California Supreme Court ruling makes it easier for prisoners to win parole

August 24, 2008
The ruling limits governor’s ability to deny parole based solely on the inmate’s crime — there must also be evidence that the inmate continues to pose a threat to the public.
By Maura Dolan and Michael Rothfeld, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
August 22, 2008
The California Supreme Court made it easier Thursday for prison inmates to win parole despite a governor’s objections, ruling that a woman who fatally shot and stabbed another woman with a potato peeler should remain free.

The 4 to 3 ruling, written by Chief Justice Ronald M. George, could affect nearly 1,000 parole cases now on appeal. Lawyers on both sides said it was the first time in recent history that the state high court ruled in favor of a prisoner in a parole case.

The decision upheld the release of Sandra Davis Lawrence, who spent nearly 24 years in prison for shooting and stabbing her lover’s wife in a jealous rage. The state parole board had approved her release four times since 1993, but three governors, including Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, overturned the board’s decisions.

In denying her parole, Schwarzenegger cited the “shockingly vicious” attack and Lawrence’s use of various aliases to avoid arrest for 11 years after the murder.

An appeals court said Schwarzenegger’s denial was not supported by evidence that she remained dangerous.

In Thursday’s ruling, George said there was “overwhelming” evidence of Lawrence’s rehabilitation while in prison and her suitability for parole. She earned two degrees in prison, learned trades that included plumbing and data processing, was president of the inmates’ Toastmasters Club, worked as a library porter and tennis coach, cofounded a tutoring program and remained discipline free. She apologized repeatedly for her crime.

The court said decisions on whether to grant parole to prisoners who received life sentences should be based on whether the inmate would pose a danger to the public if released. The court’s action marks a departure from a 2002 ruling, which held that the crime itself could justify denial.

In reviewing parole denials, courts should not merely consider “whether an inmate’s crime was especially callous, or shockingly vicious or lethal,” George wrote in Thursday’s decision. Courts should also examine whether the nature of the crime and other evidence support “the ultimate conclusion that an inmate continues to pose an unreasonable risk to public safety,” he said.

The majority said that other evidence, such as the inmate’s prison record or his or her mental state or demeanor, should be considered in deciding whether the felon posed a safety threat.

George said state law requires the parole board and the governor “to normally grant parole to life prisoners who have committed murder.”

Once a prisoner has completed his or her base sentence, he wrote, the circumstances of the crime “alone rarely will provide a valid basis for denying parole when there is strong evidence of rehabilitation and no other evidence of current dangerousness.”

Justices Joyce L. Kennard, Kathryn M. Werdegar and Carlos R. Moreno joined the holding.

Thursday’s ruling means that Lawrence, who now lives in Los Angeles, will not have to return to prison.

“I am a free woman!” said Lawrence, 61, who has been working sporadically cleaning houses and selling shoes since her release in July 2007. “I’m ready to start living my life. I couldn’t do that before because it was so up in the air.”

Andrea Hoch, the governor’s legal affairs secretary, said the ruling changed the legal standard for denying parole and would limit the governor’s discretion in such cases.

Justice Ming W. Chin, joined by two other court conservatives, dissented and accused the majority of distorting earlier rulings in parole cases.

“The awesome responsibility of deciding whether to release a convicted murderer on parole — an act that inherently runs the risk . . . that the inmate will again kill an innocent person — lies with the executive branch, not the judicial branch,” Chin wrote. He was joined by Justices Marvin R. Baxter and Carol A. Corrigan.

Lawrence shot Rubye Williams several times, then repeatedly stabbed her with the peeler, Chin wrote.

“She did this as a ‘birthday present’ to herself because she was disappointed that her lover would not leave the victim for her,” Chin added.

In a companion case Thursday, the court made it clear that some inmates would not meet the new test.

The court unanimously overturned a lower court’s decision to release Richard Shaputis, an El Cajon man convicted killing his wife, Erma. In that case, the court said there was some evidence that Shaputis remained a danger.

Shaputis, 71, had an even better prison record than Lawrence. But unlike Lawrence, Shaputis had “a long and sometimes violent criminal history” that included a conviction for lewd conduct after he was charged with raping his teenage daughter twice when he was drunk.

The parole board in Shaputis’ case also had first decided Shaputis should not be released because he remained dangerous. Only after an appeals court overturned that decision did the parole board “reluctantly” decide to approve parole, the court said.

Schwarzenegger rejected the board’s decision after concluding Shaputis remained dangerous. Shaputis challenged that decision and prevailed in a second ruling by an appeals court. Shaputis has remained in custody pending the Supreme Court’s action.

Unlike Lawrence, whose crime was an “isolated” event spurred by emotional distress, Shaputis’ wife’s “murder was the culmination of many years of . . . violent and brutalizing behavior toward the victim, his children, and his previous wife,” George wrote.

Chin, Baxter and Corrigan said in a concurring opinion that they saw no basis to distinguish the two parole cases and observed that Lawrence had been convicted of first-degree murder, whereas Shaputis was convicted of second degree.

UC Irvine Law Professor Carrie L. Hempel, who represented Lawrence as part of a legal clinic at USC, said the court’s decision “sends a clear message to prisoners that . . . if they work really hard to rehabilitate themselves they are going to get some justice in the justice system,” Hempel said.

But Assistant Atty. Gen. Julie L. Garland, who represented the governor in the case against Lawrence, said she was surprised and disappointed.

“Hopefully it won’t be opening the door for a lot of life inmates to get out,” she said.

When a convicted murderer is granted a release date by the Board of Parole Hearings, the governor has the ability to reverse it.

Since taking office in late 2003, Schwarzenegger, a Republican, has been far more generous with parole grants than his predecessor, Gray Davis, a Democrat who allowed only nine inmates to be released in nearly four years.

Schwarzenegger has permitted 192 inmates given life sentences to be released on parole, according to his office. Those prisoners represented only about 1% of the more than 16,000 inmates, most of them murderers, who appeared before the Board of Parole Hearings during that time.

Inmates’ lawyers have long complained that the state denies parole to convicts who have proven their rehabilitation or become so old and sick that they no longer pose a threat to the public.

maura.dolan@latimes.com / michael.rothfeld@latimes.com 

Times researcher Maloy Moore contributed to this report.

Crime Victims United

August 21, 2008

Over the years, Crime Victims United of California (CVUC) has informed you of various initiatives that may impact public safety in California.  Just this past fall we notified you of two initiatives filed that would have provided additional rights to inmates. The initiatives, proposed by Families United for Prison Reform, were incredibly important to watch out for and CVUC is pleased to announce that both initiatives failed to garner the requisite number of signatures to place them on the ballot. 

 

Fortunately, you will not see these proposals on the November 2008 ballot; however, you will see (and certainly hear about) a couple of other initiatives that will have significant impacts on public safety in the state.  CVUC encourages you to become familiar with the initiatives in the coming months so that you can make informed decisions when they are before you for your consideration.

 

Proposition 5 – Nonviolent Offender Rehabilitation Act (“NORA” Initiative)          OPPOSE

 

NORA is a comprehensive ballot initiative sponsored by the Drug Policy Alliance – the authors of Proposition 36.  CVUC is highly opposed to NORA, as are judges, law enforcement officials, and district attorneys across the state.

 

This initiative would require the State to expand and increase funding and oversight for individualized treatment and rehabilitation programs for nonviolent drug offenders and parolees; reduce criminal consequences of “nonviolent” drug offenses by mandating three-tiered probation with treatment and by providing for case dismissal and/or sealing of records after probation; limit the court’s authority to incarcerate offenders who violate probation or parole; shorten parole for most drug offenses, including sales, and for nonviolent property crimes; and more.  It is important to note, the provisions of this initiative would not apply to just marijuana usage.  Rather, the provisions of this initiative would be much broader, applying to users of methamphetamine and more.  Furthermore, the provisions of the initiative do not provide for or allow funding to be used for drug testing of offenders – closing the door on law enforcement’s ability to assess an offender’s drug status as it may apply to the circumstances of various offenses.

 

While the specific changes in law are of great concern to CVUC, we are even more concerned with the basis for the initiative.  NORA bases eligibility determinations solely on offenders’ official criminal records. It completely ignores their criminal profile, risks, intervention and treatment needs.  Furthermore, we know all too well that many crimes included in an official record were the result of a plea bargain and may not reflect the true nature of the crime.  As such, we could see a number of offenders who committed serious or violent crimes that were plea bargained to nonviolent, nonserious crimes afforded the benefits of the NORA act – avoiding accountability, judicial intervention, and meaningful rehabilitation.

 

Proposition 6 – Safe Neighborhoods Act                                                               SUPPORT

 

A year after bringing to California Jessica’s Law, the crackdown on sex offenders, State Senator George Runner (R-Antelope Valley) and Assemblywoman Sharon Runner (R- Lancaster) have introduced a new initiative that would target gang members for tougher prosecution and dedicate nearly $1 billion annually to enforcement and intervention. 

 

More specifically, some of the provisions of the initiative include:

 

§  Creating a nine-member Early Intervention and Rehabilitation Commission to evaluate and make recommendations on existing and future gang-reduction programs.

§  Increasing by 10 years the sentence given convicted felons caught with guns.

§  Requiring that convicted gang offenders register with local law enforcement each year for five years after conviction or their release from custody.

§  Allowing admission of sworn statements by gang crime witnesses who have died or who are unavailable to testify at the time of prosecution because of intimidation.

§  Increasing penalties for individuals who provide contraband to gang members in prison.

§  Authorizing the seizure of cars in which a gun is found that was used during the commission of a crime by the registered owner.

§  Prohibiting bail for illegal immigrants charged with violent gang crimes.

 

One of the most controversial aspects of the initiative, however, is that it would set aside $600 million in existing public safety funding and prevent it from being used for other programs unless it were approved by a three-fourths vote of the Legislature.  In addition, it also adds $340 million to the funds dedicated to fight and prevent gangs.  Some of the money would go towards providing electronic monitoring to allow police to watch and track gang members and would provide mentoring to gang members on parole. 

 

Proposition 9 – Victims’ Bill of Rights Act of 2008: Marsy’s Law                          SUPPORT

 

The Marsy’s Law initiative, introduced by CVUC Vice Chair Marcella Leach and CVUC Advisory Board Member LaWanda Hawkins, is an effort to provide victims with rights to justice and due process specifically as they relate to parole and parole hearings.  Specifically, the initiative proposes to eliminate parole hearings in which there is no likelihood a murderer will be paroled, to provide that a convicted murderer can receive a parole hearing no more frequently than every three years, and to provide that a convicted murderer can be denied a follow-up parole hearing for as long as 15 years.

 

Inmates who are serving life sentences with the possibility of parole have committed heinous crimes such as attempted murder, crimes causing great bodily injury on another individual, murder, kidnapping, sex offenses, and more are eligible for parole pursuant to Penal Code § 3046.  When the Board of Parole Hearings (BPH) denies parole, the inmate’s next hearing is scheduled to reflect their decision, i.e., one year later if the denial is for one year. 

 

Under this framework, conceivably, an inmate incarcerated for murder could have a parole hearing every year after serving either seven years or some minimum term established by law.  However, the U.S. Supreme Court has noted that about 90% of all prisoners are found unsuitable for parole at the initial hearing, while 85% are found unsuitable at the second and subsequent hearings.  This is a staggering finding that has implications on the backlog of parole hearings before BPH for inmates that the Board does not expect to grant parole to at a hearing in the following years because they have not met the Board’s criteria for parole. 

 

Not only does the system incur hardship under this framework, victims and their families also must endure the constant threat and anguish in having to testify every year against an inmates’ release.  This causes an emotional hardship for victims and their families, having to relive their heartache year after year. 

 

CVUC is very concerned about parole and parole hearings.  The issues of backlog and victim anguish year after year could be resolved if a more practical framework were in place that would limit the frequency of parole hearings for those individuals that are found unsuitable resulting in parole denial. Marsy’s Law is aimed at addressing this issue specifically and would provide immense relief for victims and their families.

Written by Jack Reilley

August 20, 2008

If victims have rights within the criminal justice system, then why are we so mad?
Why do we beg voters to Vote YES on Prop 9 – The Crime Victims Bill of Rights Act of 2008 Act?  

Our Declaration of Independence provides all citizens with these basic rights: Life, Liberty and
the Pursuit of Happiness.
 
In the California Constitution, these rights are reaffirmed:
ARTICLE 1  DECLARATION OF RIGHTS
 
SECTION 1.  All people are by nature free and independent and have
inalienable rights.  Among these are enjoying and defending life and
liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing
and obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy.
 
SEC. 3.  (a) The people have the right to instruct their
representatives, petition government for redress of grievances, and
assemble freely to consult for the common good
 
SEC. 7.  (a) A person may not be deprived of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law or denied equal protection of the
laws;
 
The federal and state government enshrined these promises and guarantees; they are a sacred bond,
the glue, between citizens and government. These rights are owed to all.
 
California citizens enjoy these rights – until, until – they become victims of crime. When criminals
kill, rob, rape, assault, and molest, they deny victims their constitutional guarantees. Criminals
deny victims their civil rights. No due process here. Equal protection – forget it.
 
Criminal rights – this is where victims learn to gag. The legal establishment bends over backward to be “fair,” to scrupulously ensure criminal rights. Lawyers, judges, legislatures and prosecutors, without
malice, have built an industry, a game, a scheme, an understanding among themselves that most often
leaves the victim on the outside, voiceless and powerless. Victims are bystanders, watching their fate determined by others.
 
Victims have few rights within the justice system. However, victims do have the right to pay for the system with their taxes. And, why are victims so hard hearted, can’t we show some humanity by forgiving and understanding the criminal? Victims are just sick of it.
 
Victims are just fed up: “mad as hell and we won’t take it anymore!” Please join victims in the fight for justice. Vote YES on Prop 9 to establish victim rights in the California Constitution and in the criminal justice system.
 
Please visit www.friendsofmarsyslaw.org Learn how you can be heard. Learn how you can help. Join the fight, Get Involved!   

MARSY’S LAW WILL PUT ENFORCEABLE VICTIM RIGHTS INTO THE CALIFORNIA CONSTITUTION

August 19, 2008

 

MARSY’S LAW WILL PUT ENFORCEABLE VICTIM RIGHTS INTO THE CALIFORNIA CONSTITUTION


GENERAL RIGHTS

  • Crime victims must be treated with respect and dignity by investigators, defense attorneys, prosecutors, judges and parole personnel
  • The rights of criminals are not superior to victim’s rights
  • Victim freedom from intimidation, harassment and abuse throughout the justice process
  • Criminals must be extradited and brought before California courts even if arrested outside the state
  • Criminals are sufficiently punished and the punishment will not be undercut or diminished by granting rights & privileges not provided by the U.S. Constitution or California laws
  • Protection from the defendant, defense attorneys and others acting on the defendant’s behalf
  • Prevent disclosure of victim’s confidential information

BAIL

  • Must consider the safety of the victim when setting bail & release conditions

PROSECUTION

  • Reasonable access to prosecutors and input in the extradition, charges filed, notification and information of pretrial disposition of the case
  • Input on decisions of pre-trial release, plea, sentencing and post-conviction release
  • A speedy trial and speedy decisions involving post-judgment proceedings
  • Input on probation recommendation

RESTITUTION

  • Victim right to seek and secure restitution from the criminal 

PAROLE

  • Victim informed of all parole procedures – dates, times, changes – and release of the prisoner
  • Victim can provide information to the parole authority
  • Parole authority must consider the safety of the victim and his/her family
  • Reforms the parole system by changing the criminal’s right to multiple, frequent parole hearings
  • Relieves the trauma of uncertainty, misinformation and disregard of the victim and survivors. Relives the turmoil and disruption in victim’s lives from capricious decisions and changes in parole dates and locations.

                                            VOTE YES ON PROP 9

Friends of Marsy’s Law

August 19, 2008

Marsy’s Law – Prop 9 will establish a Crime Victims’ Bill of Rights in the California constitution. Victims and survivors will be guaranteed rights in the investigation, bail, prosecution and parole processes. Victims will be protected from harassment by the criminals and their attorneys. Victims and survivors will be treated with respect and dignity in all phases of the criminal process.

Friends of Marsy’s Law is a voluntary group of citizens banded together to pass Marsy’s Law – Prop 9 on the California November 2008 ballot.

Marsy’s Law belongs to the VICTIMS, it is our law! If we want it passed by the voters, we must get involved. Defeat is not an option; we won’t have another opportunity for victim justice for a generation, a tragedy we can’t allow to happen! We have defeated opponents with big money before, we will win again!

Members are mostly crime survivors, victims, family and friends who suffer every day from the personal and physical affects and the absolute injustice of violent crime. Members are also concerned citizens who want to balance the scales of justice.

Friends of Marsy’s Law is not affiliated with any person, organization, political faction or business. Members are not asked for dues or fees. We do not solicit donations. We are not a public charity, c3 or other. We are individuals determined to pass Marsy’s Law using our constitutional rights to assembly, petition and free speech. We comply with all election requirements to exercise these rights.

5th Annual 5k Run Walk Health & Safety Expo

August 14, 2008

WWW.CRIMESURVIVORSRUNWALK.ORG

Event location:Los Alamitos Joint Forces Training Base
4522 Saratoga Ave.
Los Alamitos , CA.  90720
Driving directions: www.mapquest.com or www.maps.yahoo.com
Thomas Guide, pp 797 – Orange County, CA
Free parking is available.  Come early to secure a good spot. Parking Pass Needed

Event date / time:Saturday, October 11, 2008 @ 7:00 am – 12:00 noon
Person to contact:Patricia Wenskunas
Phone number: (949) 872-7895
Email: crimesurvivors@aol.com

Special Guests: Marisa Petroro, Case #18 on Deal or No Deal, Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens and Event MC Anthony Vultaggio.
IN PARTNERSHIP WITH
ADDA
Los Alamitos Base
Orange County Sheriff’s Department
LA County Sheriff’ Department
Los Alamitos Police
Garden Grove Police
Fullerton Police
Santa Ana Police
HB Police
CHP
Irvine Police
La Habra Police
Costa Mesa Police
Santa Ana Police
Seal Beach Police
UC Irvine Police
Orange County Traffic Officers Assoc
SPONSORSHIPS AVAILABILE / VOLUNTEERS NEEDED