Archive for November, 2009

How are children affected by domestic violence?

November 23, 2009

All children are affected by the violence in their homes. Regardless of whether or not our children have been physically abused, watching their mother being battered is a frightening experience. Children from violent homes can exhibit a variety of behaviors. Some may “act out” and may be viewed as delinquent. Others work very hard to excel at every endeavor in attempt to keep the family peace. Living with violence creates intense stress for a child. Below is a list of some behaviors that are frequently associated with children from violent homes.

  • Physical Complaints - headaches, stomach aches, bed wetting or ulcers
  • Eating Problems - Increased or Decreased appetite
  • Trouble Sleeping - being tired all the time
  • Hair Pulling - nail biting
  • Physical Injuries
  • School Phobias - Impaired Concentration
  • Temper Tantrums
  • Nightmares
  • Fear of Men- and/or their voices
  • Fear of Being Touched - flinching when someone reaches toward them
  • Disruptive Behavior - stealing, aggression
  • Passivity - clinging, anxiety
  • Withdrawal - isolation, loneliness
  • Role Reversal- child assumes parental roles, protector/caretaker
  • Poor Self Image
  • Depression
  • Suicidal Ideation - and/or suicide attempts  

Effects of Domestic Violence on Children:

Imitation
Children often imitate behaviors they witness. Generational transfer of violent
behavior and emotional dependency on others is common, thus, children learn that
violence is an acceptable behavior and an integral part of intimate
relationships. Children may become abusive adults or accept domination and
control as a normal part of intimate relations. Children raised in an abusive
environment may be abused as adults.

Targets of Violence
Children are often abused in order for the abuser to hurt,
punish, or gain revenge upon his/her spouse. The abuser may feel “ganged up” on
by family members who act or speak out against his violence. OR, the child gets
caught in the crossfire and is unintentionally injured as a result of parental
conflict. This is still considered child endangerment. The child is also abused
by the victim as she releases her stress on the child or attempts to keep the
child “in line” so not to “irritate” the abuser.

Neglect
A victim living under the stress of the abuser is seldom able to
fully attend to the needs of the children. Infants may not become attached to
their primary caretaker and lack trust; young children’s growth may be stunted due to lack of stimulation; and may have sleeping and eating disorders. Infants and children who are neglected by their caregivers are prone to illness and have tremendous difficulty in areas of development and overall well being.

Emotional Disorders
Low self esteem and low confidence often result when children are unable to handle life situations. Phobias, depression, stress disorders, stuttering, insomnia, impaired concentration difficulty in school, psychosomatic illnesses, etc. are a result of the chaotic/abusive home environment and often go unattended because the parent(s) is overwhelmed by their own need.

Self-blame
Arguments about child rearing and/or a child’s behavior often precipitate violent episodes between parents. The child may see himself as responsible for the violence and may compensate through suicidal thoughts, overly pleasing behavior or extreme acting out behavior. The children literally blame themselves for the violence in their home. They feel “it is all my fault and if I weren’t here, none of this would be happening”.

Low Self-esteem
Children raised in violent home settings usually have poor definitions of self and values; inconsistent responses from the parents to the child’s behavior can undermine a child’s self-esteem even more. Psychological and emotional abuse also defeats self-esteem and fosters feelings of confusion, helplessness and powerlessness.

Compensation
Children assume adult responsibilities that can endanger the child physically as well as delay the child’s physical and emotional development. The children go from child to adult roles without passing through adolescent stages, for example, by caring for the victim and/or younger children or caring for themselves. Children raised in violent atmospheres often care for younger siblings in the absence of the primary caretaker(s), or take over the “adult roles” such as cooking meals or cleaning the house.

Refereeing
Children are in danger of being involved in the assault emotionally and physically. Additional emotional danger is possible because the “referee” is expected to be impartial while the child mat be experiencing divided loyalties. If a child assumes the role of the “referee”, he/she may withdraw from both parents.

Divided Loyalties
The child often attempts to protect and defend all family members and is being used by both parents against one another. Children feel love for both parents and are confused as to why two people he loves are hurting. Feelings of shame and guilt usually result; therefore the child may isolate himself from his peers and other family members. Children experiencing these feelings are often locked into silence by the abuse.

Lack of Trust
Children with erratic parents never know whether they’ll be emotionally and/or physically neglected or whether they will receive an outpouring of affection as the abuser attempts to reconcile abusive behavior. Children don’t know who to trust or when to trust when their environment is chaotic.

Mixed Feelings
When a child lives in a chaotic environment, feelings of guilt, fear, helplessness, bottled rage, and embarrassment usually result.

Fear of Abandonment
Often during or after an attack, children are sent to stay with friends, family, or neighbors. Siblings may be separated or authorities may intervene. Parents are fearful that the Division of Family Services may come to take their children into protective custody, or that the abusive spouse may kidnap the children to use as “leverage” or as “bargaining chips” against the other spouse. All of these situations can result in separation anxiety for the children.

Runaways
Children may run away to seek independence and freedom from violence, rage, and arguments at home. Children learn that running from their problems is an appropriate means of dealing with crisis instead of communicating with others to get problems solved.

Poor School Performance
Problems at home (specifically violence) may cause loss of attentiveness, lack of adequate rest, and poor nutritional habits in children. Low self-esteem and inability to complete assignments are roots of poor school performance. Children raised in homes where violence of any kind is a frequent occurrence often have tremendous difficulty academically. Some children may compensate for the violent environment by over achieving or by putting all their concentration into one activity such as academics or sports.

Substance Abuse
Children with inappropriate or inadequate coping mechanisms, along with low self-esteem will often “give in’ to peer pressure and become involved with drug/alcohol use and abuse. Some children model their parent’s behavior and cope with life stress through smoking and drug/alcohol use and abuse.

Suicide
Children who experience violence in their homes may have thoughts of suicide as a means of “escaping”. Self-mutilation and obsession with death are common responses.

Effects of Domestic violence on Children – Summary by Age Group:

Infants – Characterized by poor health, poor sleeping habits, excessive crying and screaming, disruptive attachment to the caregiver(s), abnormal feeding routine and accidental injury. Infancy is a critical developmental period. Eating and/or sleeping disorders are often manifested at this early age and usually become more evident in later years of development. Stress interferes with brain development. Neural connections missed at this age are never completely replaced.

Toddler/Preschooler – Characterized by overall or specific area(s) of delayed development, signs of terror, yelling, irritable behavior, hiding, shaking, stuttering, clinging to the caretaker, somatic complaints, and regression to earlier stages of functioning. Children may become protective of their mother and other family members.

Latency Age – Characterized by Children looking to parents as role models and copying the parent’s behavior as acceptable and normal. Children may fight with others, experience school problems, and exhibit feelings of shame, guilt, and embarrassment. Child may have developmental delays, low self-esteem, and little opportunity for growth outside the home. Children raised in violent homes may have angry feelings toward family members, exhibit signs of fear, anxiety, denial, distracted, and inattentive behavior. Most often, children will blame others for the problems at home.

Adolescents/Teens – Characterized by guarded and secretive behavior about family members and embarrassment about the home situation. Teenagers don’t invite friends over and they spend much of their free time away from home. Denial and aggression are the predominant forms of problem solving. Teens often blame others instead of attempting to solve problems, they may encounter violence in their dating relationships, and they may run away as a means coping. Some teens become involved in criminal activity, some may become sexually active, or exhibit anxiety, such as nail biting or hair pulling and other self-mutilating/self destructive activities. Teens may assume the parent/caretaker role and experience confused feelings toward their parents. Some teens may over/under achieve in school and other activities and may exhibit signs of depression, eating disorders, sleeping disorders, and poor communications skills. Teens raised in violent homes often distrust those around them, usually have a complex system(s) of manipulation and may abuse those who abuse them within the family.

Source: AWAIC – http://www.awaic.org/education.html

What Punishment Fits This Crime?

November 21, 2009

So, the so-called 9-11 Gang of Five will go on trial in a federal court, as opposed to before a military commission. The bottom line question then has to be: Are you ready for the possibility that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed or any of his fellow collaborators might walk free on a sly defense attorney’s manipulation of our system?

Don’t think it couldn’t happen.

Millionaire Robert Durst walked free even after he admitted to murdering a neighbor. In my opinion, O.J. Simpson got a free pass, too, after taking the lives of his ex-wife Nicole and her friend Ron Goldman. I could cite other cases in which juries, again in my opinion, did not come to the right conclusion. Take it from me, it happens.

As you sit reading this column, there are American lawyers preparing and strategizing right now on how they might secure the freedom of Mohammed, Ramzi Binalshibh, Ali Abd Al-Aziz Ali, Mustafa Ahmad Al-Hawsawi and Waleed Bin Attash. This, after Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM) has repeatedly proclaimed he was the mastermind who planned the attacks on America that claimed nearly 3,000 lives that horrible day in September 2001.

KSM gleefully brags about hating and murdering Americans. His followers, some of whom will be in court with him, do the same. This is what they live for — to kill us — and to go down in history as martyrs.

Let me be perfectly clear about why I think these trials should have been conducted in a military court.

Sept. 11, 2001, was not the beginning of some temporary crime wave. What happened at the World Trade Towers, the Pentagon and over the skies of Pennsylvania wasn’t just a criminal act, it was an act of war. Don’t be fooled just because these terrorists don’t wear proper military uniforms. These men, who will go on trial in New York soon, aren’t mere criminals. They are enemy combatants and should be treated as the soldiers they are.

Being brought before a civilian court, these men will be afforded all the rights and privileges they excoriate America for. The fact that ‘enhanced interrogation techniques’ (read that: water-boarding) was used on some of them as our agents tried to extract vital information will be used as a reason to try to toss out crucial evidence. Their long detention in secret locations and then at Guantanamo Bay will surely be highlighted as their defense attorneys try to play the “poor-them” card.

 

And it goes without saying these defendants will try to use our open justice system as a platform to spew their warped sense of how the world should be.

Even with the most diligent judge at the helm, there will most likely be anti-American outbursts in the courtroom. Their free-of-charge American lawyers will stage-manage the system toward mistrial by demanding classified information be released to “prove their case.”

America will bend over backward and spend multiple millions of dollars to demonstrate we can stage a secure and fair trial for even our most vilified enemies. We’ll hire the accused the best available lawyersm and some believe this will show the rest of the world we are virtuous people. But guess what? The radical Muslim world will still call us “The Great Satan” and worse.

I have to wonder how any American defense attorney could feel comfortable taking such a case, so I called my friend Mickey Sherman, who wrote a book titled, “How Can You Defend Those People?”

As a defense lawyer, Sherman firmly believes every human being deserves good representation in court no matter what they’ve done. But even he admitted to me he would never agree to go to court with these terror-loving jihadists. He called the Gang of Five “the defendants we love to hate.” Sherman believes any lawyer that takes one of the terrorist cases will be vilified and do permanent damage to both their professional and personal life.

Defense attorney Ron Kuby, never a man to shy away from representing controversial figures (he practiced with the late William Kuntsler), calls the whole trial process into question. “KSM has been standing before a military commission admitting he did it, saying he wants the government to kill him. The government wants to kill him. The mockery comes,” according to Kuby, “because the military commission didn’t accept the guilty plea in the first place … the trial becomes a long form of assisted suicide.”

In the end, the defendants will likely be glad to admit in civilian court what they did and say they are ready to die. The question then becomes, what does the court do? Does it give the terrorists what they want most in life: death? Or are they sentenced to what I see as their worst nightmare — life — in an American maximum security prison?

Visit Diane Dimond’s official website at www.dianedimond.com for investigative reporting, polls and more. To find out more about Diane Dimond and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS.COM

Stress, depression and the holidays: 10 tips for coping

November 20, 2009

Stress and depression can ruin your holidays and hurt your health. Being realistic, planning ahead and seeking support can help ward off stress and depression.

The holiday season, which begins for most Americans with Thanksgiving and continues through New Year’s Day, often brings unwelcome guests — stress and depression. And it’s no wonder. In an effort to pull off a perfect holiday, you might find yourself facing a dizzying array of demands — parties, shopping, baking, cleaning and entertaining, to name a few. So much for peace and joy, right?

Actually, with some practical tips, you can minimize the stress and depression that often accompany the holidays. You may even end up enjoying the holidays more than you thought you would.

Recognize holiday triggers

Learn to recognize common holiday triggers, so you can disarm them before they lead to a meltdown:

  • Relationships. Relationships can cause turmoil, conflict or stress at any time, but tensions are often heightened during the holidays. Family misunderstandings and conflicts can intensify — especially if you’re thrust together for several days. On the other hand, facing the holidays without a loved one can be tough and leave you feeling lonely and sad.
  • Finances. With the added expenses of gifts, travel, food and entertainment, the holidays can put a strain on your budget — and your peace of mind. Not to mention that overspending now can mean financial worries for months to come.
  • Physical demands. Even die-hard holiday enthusiasts may find that the extra shopping and socializing can leave them wiped out. Being exhausted increases your stress, creating a vicious cycle. Exercise and sleep — good antidotes for stress and fatigue — may take a back seat to chores and errands. To top it off, burning the wick at both ends makes you more susceptible to colds and other unwelcome guests.

Tips to prevent holiday stress and depression

When stress is at its peak, it’s hard to stop and regroup. Try to prevent stress and depression in the first place, especially if the holidays have taken an emotional toll on you in the past.

  1. Acknowledge your feelings. If someone close to you has recently died or you can’t be with loved ones, realize that it’s normal to feel sadness and grief. It’s OK to take time to cry or express your feelings. You can’t force yourself to be happy just because it’s the holiday season.
  2. Reach out. If you feel lonely or isolated, seek out community, religious or other social events. They can offer support and companionship. Volunteering your time to help others also is a good way to lift your spirits and broaden your friendships.
  3. Be realistic. The holidays don’t have to be perfect or just like last year. As families change and grow, traditions and rituals often change as well. Choose a few to hold on to, and be open to creating new ones. For example, if your adult children can’t come to your house, find new ways to celebrate together, such as sharing pictures, emails or videotapes.
  4. Set aside differences. Try to accept family members and friends as they are, even if they don’t live up to all your expectations. Set aside grievances until a more appropriate time for discussion. And be understanding if others get upset or distressed when something goes awry. Chances are they’re feeling the effects of holiday stress and depression too.
  5. Stick to a budget. Before you go gift and food shopping, decide how much money you can afford to spend. Then stick to your budget. Don’t try to buy happiness with an avalanche of gifts. Try these alternatives: Donate to a charity in someone’s name, give homemade gifts or start a family gift exchange.
  6. Plan ahead. Set aside specific days for shopping, baking, visiting friends and other activities. Plan your menus and then make your shopping list. That’ll help prevent last-minute scrambling to buy forgotten ingredients. And make sure to line up help for party prep and cleanup.
  7. Learn to say no. Saying yes when you should say no can leave you feeling resentful and overwhelmed. Friends and colleagues will understand if you can’t participate in every project or activity. If it’s not possible to say no when your boss asks you to work overtime, try to remove something else from your agenda to make up for the lost time.
  8. Don’t abandon healthy habits. Don’t let the holidays become a free-for-all. Overindulgence only adds to your stress and guilt. Have a healthy snack before holiday parties so that you don’t go overboard on sweets, cheese or drinks. Continue to get plenty of sleep and physical activity.
  9. Take a breather. Make some time for yourself. Spending just 15 minutes alone, without distractions, may refresh you enough to handle everything you need to do. Take a walk at night and stargaze. Listen to soothing music. Find something that reduces stress by clearing your mind, slowing your breathing and restoring inner calm.
  10. Seek professional help if you need it. Despite your best efforts, you may find yourself feeling persistently sad or anxious, plagued by physical complaints, unable to sleep, irritable and hopeless, and unable to face routine chores. If these feelings last for a while, talk to your doctor or a mental health professional.

Take control of the holidays

Don’t let the holidays become something you dread. Instead, take steps to prevent the stress and depression that can descend during the holidays. With a little planning and some positive thinking, you may find that you enjoy the holidays this year more than you thought you could

You Can Make It Through the Holidays

November 20, 2009

http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ovc/publications/holidaytips/welcome.html

Masthead: Coping With the Holidays After the Death of a Loved One or When You Are a Victim/Crime Survivor

Closeup photo of the face of a man in distress and pullquote: Many have been surprised to discover that the anticipation of a holiday without a friend or family member can be harder than the actual holiday itself.Many among us have struggled with the cloud of sadness that may surround the holidays when a friend or family has experienced a tragedy such as a sudden violent death or a serious physical or emotional injury. The onslaught of holiday cheer may seem too much to bear. Holidays may give rise to new or returning bouts of depression, panic attacks, and other forms of anxiety for those whose lives have been affected. Victims of crime, family members, friends, and work colleagues may re-experience life-changing traumas through flashbacks, nightmares, and overwhelming sadness. Some have trouble sleeping, while others don’t want to get out of bed. Tears may come easily, often when least expected. Old ailments, including headaches, gastrointestinal problems, and other aches and pains may return.

Many victims and families, however, have found that holidays can be manageable if they take charge of the season, rather than letting it take charge of them.

Families who have made this difficult journey offer some suggestions to help those who may be just starting down this path.

Crime Victims United of California Legislative Update October 2009

November 19, 2009

Upcoming Important Dates: 

January 4: Legislature Reconvenes for 2010 Legislative Session

January 10: Governor’s FY 2010-2011 Budget Proposal Deadline

February 19: Bill Introduction Deadline

April 18 – 24: 2010 Victims Rights Week

April 19: March on the Capitol & CVUC Policy Conference 

Schwarzenegger Administration Releases Prison Reduction Plan 

The Schwarzenegger Administration has filed a revised prison reduction plan with the federal courts as of last week in response to the three judge panel’s order to reduce the prison population by 40,00 over the next two years. 

The new plan would purportedly reduce the prison population by 42,000 by December 2011 and identify, per the judge’s order, State laws that would need to be suspending in order to meet the reduction goal.  Although the Administration has provided such information relative to suspension of laws, it has indicated doing so would not be within the federal court’s jurisdiction to intrude in to the State’s affairs. 

The revised plan includes the proposals CVUC and law enforcement stakeholders fought hard to defeat this summer as well as other proposals that will require changes in State laws or federal court orders.  More specifically, the plan includes: 

-       Further developing and utilizing the Parole Violation Decision Making Instrument (PVDMI) statewide (Executive Authority);

-       Expand the use of authorized out of state correctional facilities (Executive Authority);

-      Consideration and discharge of eligible undocumented inmates from parole and for commutation and deportation (Executive Authority);

-       GPS monitoring for eligible parole violators as an alternative to incarceration (Executive Authority);

-       Summary parole where “lower risk” offenders would be placed on inactive parole and not returned for “technical violations” (Legislation Needed);

-       Reduction of time served for qualified inmates (credit enhancements; Legislation Needed);

-       Increase in the monetary threshold for grand theft (Legislation Needed); and

-       Alternative custody options for “lower level” offenders (Legislation Needed). 

In addition to these key provisions, the Administration has indicated its intent to again pursue many of these issues through legislation in 2010 and to expand the number of inmates that can be held in custody out-of-state; enable CDCR to accelerate construction of in-State capacity authorized by AB 900; and expedite leasing, building and/or operating new beds through establishing private vendor contracts to house inmates and operate private facilities in the State. 

For more information, please see http://www.cdcr.ca.gov/News/2009_Press_Releases/Nov_12.html   

Speaker Appoints Members to Select Committee on Re-Entry 

Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) has announced the membership of a select committee created to examine ways to ease the strain the transition from prison into society can have on former inmates and their communities – the Select Committee on Re-Entry.  The Committee, created in May, is tasked with responding to issues raised in a RAND Corporation report, “Understanding the Public Health Implications of Prisoner Reentry in California.” 

Bass indicated that the committee’s work “[will be] critical to our efforts to improve public safety, reform our overburdened corrections system and reduce costs to the state budget.” 

Assemblyman Isadore Hall (D-Compton) will chair the Committee and will be joined by Assemblymembers Tom Ammiano, Marty Block, Steve Bradford, Nathan Fletcher, Felipe Fuentes, Warren Furutani, Dave Jones, Jim Nielsen, Sandré Swanson, Alberto Torrico and Norma Torres.  The committee will hold an information hearing in February 2010 where the RAND Corporation will present their findings to the Legislature. The hearing will also include testimony from local officials, non-governmental organizations and the public to hear what challenges they face as they deal with those trying to break the cycle of re-incarceration and return successfully to our local communities. 

For more information on the RAND Corporation report, please see the full report at http://www.rand.org/pubs/technical_reports/2009/RAND_TR687.pdf

2010 CVUC Policy Conference – *SAVE THE DATE* 

In conjunction with Victims Rights Week in 2010, Crime Victims United of California (CVUC) is pleased to announce it will host its first annual policy conference dedicated to key public safety and corrections issues facing Californians.  The conference will be held on Monday, April 19th immediately following the March on the Capitol.  CVUC’s conference will focus on Proposition 9: Marsy’s Law and a panel discussion related to current correctional proposals including early release and summary parole. 

Save the date and stay tuned for additional details to be released soon…

Victims Can Now Access Parole Suitability Hearing Transcripts

November 17, 2009

Brea Police Department Partners with Crime Survivors

November 16, 2009

Billy L. Hutchinson, Chief of Police

Today’s Date:11-12-09Time:0900Release Authorized By:Sgt. Bill Smyser
Date of Incident:11-12-09Time of Incident:N/A
Location:Brea Police Department
Type of Crime or Incident:Brea Police partner with Crime Survivors, Inc.
 
For additional information contact Sgt. Bill Smyser, PIO, at (714) 990-7620
or after hours, call the on-duty Watch Commander at (714) 990-7624.
                                                                                         
In an effort to support the victims of violent crime, the Brea Police Department has partnered with a local victim advocacy group known as Crime Survivors, Inc. Crime Survivors, Inc., based out of Irvine, California, is a non-profit, victim advocacy group that is committed to serving the community by being an advocate and resource for crime victims and their families. Crime Survivors founder and CEO Patricia Wenskunas, a victim of a violent crime herself years ago, established the non-profit organization to work in the community to make victims’ rights a top priority. Crime Survivors facilitate communication and cooperation across various public service, government and non-profit organizations to ensure that victims’ rights are understood, and that the services victims are entitled to are received. Crime Survivors’ vision is for victims of crime to recover from their experience mentally, physically, emotionally and financially, by receiving respect, support and protection from law enforcement, the judicial system and the community.
 
As part of the partnership, Crime Survivors provides police agencies with child and adult “emergency kits” which are distributed by officers to crime victims. The kits include resource guides, a phone card, toiletries, a DVD explaining the legal system, a mini first aid kit and other items a victim may find useful in the first 72 hours after a crime has occurred. Officers will carry these “emergency kits” in their police vehicles and distribute them when appropriate.
 
Brea Police Chief Billy Hutchinson said, “The Brea Police Department is proud to serve the cities of Brea and Yorba Linda and of our partnership with Crime Survivors, Inc. The victim of a violent crime is often times lost and confused when the police arrive to assist them.  Crime Survivors, Inc. has made it possible to alleviate a portion of that stress by providing additional victim support.  Crime Survivors helps all of us in the criminal justice system to remember what is truly important: the surviving victim of a crime.”
 
Crime Survivors partners with the following police agencies:
 
Anaheim Police Department
Brea Police Department
Chapman Public Safety
Costa Mesa Police Department
Cypress Police Department
Fullerton Police Department
Garden Grove Police Department
La Habra Police Department
Irvine Police Department
Los Alamitos Police Department
Newport Beach Police Department
Orange County Sheriff Department
Placentia Police Department
Santa Ana Police Department
Seal Beach Police Department
UCIrvine Police Department
Westminster  Police Department

Donations needed for Thanksgiving meal baskets

November 16, 2009
Donations needed for Thanksgiving meal baskets
 
With the support of our community, Crime Survivors provides Thanksgiving meal baskets to families effected by crime, including murder, attempted murder, domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, child abuse and other violent crime victims and their families.
 
Each package will include turkey, gravy, stuffing mix, instant mashed potatoes, yams, macaroni and cheese, corn, cranberry sauce,  dinner rolls, pumpkin pie, beverage, cookie pan, plates, napkins and utensils. http://www.crimesurvivors.com/calendar/images/thanksgiving.jpg   
Crime Survivors is in need of your tax-deductible donations to meet their goal of providing the meal baskets this year. Checks payable to Crime Survivors may be sent to P.O. Box 54552, Irvine, CA. 92619-4552. Donations may be made online through Pay Pal at www.crimesurvivors.org or Credit Cards can be accepted at crimesurvivors@aol.com or faxed information form to (775) 245-4798. For more information, please call (949) 872-7895.
 
Thank you very much for your consideration to support this Thanksgiving program.

Homicide Victims Memorial Foundation / Justice For Homicide Victims

November 14, 2009

2009 HVMF - JHV Memorial

Crime Survivors Donate Bundles to Help Empower Crime Victims

November 12, 2009
To see a video on the organization turning over the bundles click the icon below.
 
Crime Survivors, Inc has donated bags packed with essential items to help Deputies assist residents and their families recover after a crime.

From the Crime Survivors Website 

WE ARE HERE TO HELP!
Crime Survivors is committed to serving our community by being an advocate and resource for crime victims and their families. If you don’t know where to turn, or are confused or frustrated with the public services that are available to you as you recover or seek justice, Crime Survivors can help. Our web site will provide information, resources and tools that will help you become a “Survivor”.

For more about Crime Survivors click here and go to their Website. www.crimesurvivors.org