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Support for victims of crime

12/01/2004

The Home Secretary's consultation paper on compensation and support for victims of crime was welcomed today by Justice Minister Cathy Jamieson

The majority of the proposals in the consultation will relate to England and Wales only. Ms Jamieson stressed that the Executive has already made great progress in helping victims of crime in Scotland through the Scottish Strategy for Victims.

However, the Minister today confirmed that the Executive would look at the merits of further measures - such as a surcharge on offenders - as part of the ongoing reforms of the justice system in Scotland.

Ms Jamieson said:

"We already have an excellent track record in providing services for victims of crime in Scotland. We introduced our Strategy for Victims in Scotland in 2001 with the clear aim of providing a wide range of effective services for the victims of crime. To date we have made very considerable progress.

"We have also devoted substantial sums of money to implementing the Strategy. In 2003-04, this totalled over £6 million. In 2004-05 this figure will rise to almost £11 million.

"The paper launched today by the Home Office is about better services for victims of crime in England and Wales. Where the GB Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme is affected, there will be some impact in Scotland but this will be minor. There will be no impact on the awards to individual victims except in certain very unusual cases.

"I support the principle underlying a number of proposals in the consultation paper, namely that wherever possible the perpetrator of the crime should be made to pay towards compensating the victim.

"I will therefore look closely at the merits of imposing a surcharge on offenders in Scotland - in light of the forthcoming report by Sheriff Principal McInnes on summary justice, and the work of the Sentencing Commission. I will also seek to encourage our courts to make more use of compensation orders.

"While the paper consults on where responsibility should lie for compensation of workers injured in the course of employment, I must stress that the Executive remains wholly committed to the protection of workers in the workplace and to legislation to protect, in particular, emergency workers."

The proposals in the consultation paper that would apply to Scotland are those affecting the GB Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme. These are:
• payment of compensation to those traumatised on seeing people commit suicide on a railway line and those injured accidentally in taking an exceptional risk in dealing with crime. In 2002-03 out of a total of 4,912 successful cases handled by the CICS, 11 were in relation to railway suicides.
• proposal to transfer responsibility for compensating workers injured during the course of duty from the CICS to their employer.

The Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority (CICA) is a Non-Departmental Public Body which administers the Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme throughout Scotland, England and Wales.

CICA employs approximately 550 staff (around 400 in Glasgow and the balance in London) to decide on applications for compensation from victims of violent crime. They deal with over 76,000 applications for compensation each year. Expenditure on compensation payments is over £200 million per year; approximately 10 per cent in Scotland.

In Scotland we have created a Victim Information and Advice service, which is part of the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service; a Witness Support Service, to help all those attending Sheriff and High Court trials; pilot victim statements schemes, enabling victims to tell the court the impact a crime has had on them; legislation and guidance aimed at helping vulnerable witness, including children, to give their best evidence in court; and a pilot scheme providing support and information to victims of youth crime.

The Scottish Strategy for Victims was launched in January 2001. It was the first time a clear focus was given to the needs of victims. The Strategy is owned by all criminal justice agencies in Scotland and Victims Support Scotland. The Victim Steering Group (VSG) oversees progress on the Strategy's objectives.

The Consultation Paper is available on the Home Office Website www.homeoffice.gov.uk

Page updated: Saturday, July 17, 2004