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University of Technology Sydney Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 16 May 2017
VICTIM IMPACT STATEMENTS AND THE NATURE AND INCIDENCE OF OFFENDER REMORSE:
FINDINGS FROM AN OBSERVATION STUDY IN A SUPERIOR SENTENCING
COURT
Abstract
Scholars have argued that disclosure of
the impact of the crime on the victim through VISs has the potential to produce
an emotional
response in offenders that creates an opportunity for offenders to
express remorse and apologise to crime victims in the sentencing
hearing.
Implicit in this claim, is that the incidence of such victim-focused remorse is
a virtue and a positive restorative element
of VISs. Drawing from data largely
generated by observation of 18 sentencing hearings of homicide offenders and
semi-structured
interviews with 14 family victims, this article examines this
claim by exploring offender response to VISs and the nature and incidence
of
offender remorse observed in the courtroom.
Introduction
A
marked feature of contemporary criminal justice policy in many common law
jurisdictions such as Australia is the prominence of the
perceived interests and
concerns of crime victims.[1] In
efforts to reduce victim marginalisation and dissatisfaction with criminal
justice,[2] administrative and
legislative reforms have targeted key areas including support, information,
protection and participation in the
legal processes. While increased services
and facilities for victims have been generally welcomed, changes to established
sentencing
practices that enable crime victims to participate in sentencing
hearings through victim impact statements (VISs) have been more
controversial.[3]
Typically a VIS
is an account of the harm sustained by a victim as a result of an offence. When
first introduced, VISs were written
documents, prepared by a designated third
party, the victim or victim representative, and submitted to the court by the
prosecution
during the sentencing hearing. Increasingly however, provision is
being made for VISs to be read aloud to the court by the victim-author
or
representative and/or presented in new forms such as victim impact videos or
DVD’s (VID’s).[4] The
functions of VISs are generally articulated in instrumental or expressive terms.
From an instrumental perspective, some proponents
of VISs contend that VISs are
useful sentencing tools that provide information to assist decision-makers in
formulating more proportionate
and accurate
sentences.[5] The relevance and use of
VISs in the determination of penalty however has been a controversial issue in
common law jurisdictions,
particularly in the context of sentencing homicide
offenders,[6] and many scholars argue
that VISs are irrelevant to the purposes and legal goals of
sentencing.[7] This debate will not be
pursued further and instead, the subject of this article is the expressive
function of VISs.
According to
Erez,[8] the expressive function of
VISs is largely victim-focused and aims to redress the former exclusion and
marginalisation of victims
in the sentencing hearing as well as improve their
courtroom experiences. Some scholars argue that the expressive capacities of
VISs,
especially oral VISs, can bring restorative elements into the sentencing
hearings that benefit victims.[9] For
scholars such as Roberts and
Erez,[10] and
Cassell,[11] a large part of the
restorative value of a VIS is its communicative potential. Through VISs, victims
can recount their experiences
and express their feelings about the crime to both
the court and the offender.[12] In
response, emotions are elicited in offenders which facilitate feelings of
remorse and empathy.[13] This
emotional transformation can lead the offender to accept responsibility for the
crime, express regret for their actions and
apologise to the
victim.[14] Roberts and Erez
describe this sequence as ‘reciprocal communication’. Scholars
suggest that the benefits of apology
for victims in the criminal context
include: a lessening of anger and resentment such that forgiveness might be
possible and forgiveness
can be significant for psychological healing; repair of
relationships; and a restoration of
self-worth.[15]
This reciprocal
communication potential of VISs is a claim that has yet to be tested
empirically. The aim of this article is to contribute
to the gap in the
literature through an analysis of data drawn from a small qualitative study of
observation of victim participation
in homicide sentencing hearings in NSW and
interviews with family victims. At the outset it is important to acknowledge the
challenges
of assessing the incidence and nature of offender remorse in this
study. I did not interview offenders involved in the hearings and
so cannot make
claims with regard to the subjective emotional states of the offenders observed.
Nor can claims be made with regard
to the genuineness or otherwise of any
remorse that was demonstrated. Instead, using a conceptual framework developed
for this purpose,
this article analyses the incidence and nature of offender
remorse as demonstrated and observed in the hearings by other
participants and particularly, the family victims involved. This research makes
an important contribution
to a limited empirical literature on the dynamics and
effects of VISs in the courtroom as well as the victim-offender communication
dyadic in the sentencing hearing.
The first section of this article
considers how VISs in sentencing hearings can be viewed as restorative measures.
Methodological
issues related to the study including the conceptualisation of
offender remorse are then outlined and details of the findings presented.
Analysis of the findings reveals that there is little to support the claim in
this particular group of hearings; in fact, there is
a basis for querying
whether the demonstration of such offender remorse in the sentencing hearing, at
least of homicide offenders,
is indeed a virtue as envisaged by Roberts and Erez
in this particular context.
[16]
Victim Impact
Statements as Restorative Measures in the Sentencing Hearing
The aim of
this part is not to explore or critique the concept of restorative justice but
to consider how VISs in sentencing proceedings
might be considered part of this
field. According to Daly, “restorative justice is a contested concept,
with different political
agendas...and it has increasingly become an idea
without boundaries or limits. The restorative justice field is dynamic, evolving
and extraordinarily
varied”.[17] While a precise
definition of restorative justice is elusive, it can be conceived broadly in
terms of values, aims, processes and
outcomes;[18] its essence is the
recognition that key stakeholders in a criminal matter are the offender, the
victim, their communities and the
wider
community.[19] Restorative values
include: fairness, restoration/ healing, inclusivity, collaboration, respect,
dignity, support, safety, democracy,
empowerment, accountability,
responsibility, and
reparation.[20]
Unlike conventional adversarial criminal proceedings that are
offender-focused,
Unlike conventional adversarial criminal proceedings that
are offender-focused,
many restorative justice practices can be described as
victim-oriented.[21] The very nature
of a restorative justice approach requires that victims be recognised and
treated as key stakeholders in the resolution
of the dispute. Victims are
encouraged to speak about their experience and the harms caused by the crime and
the concomitant expression
of emotions by victims is regarded as
“natural” as they recount the effects of the crime, unlike
traditional legal processes
that work to “disparage and control such
emotions”.[22]
Victim-centred
outcomes of restorative events include offender accountability for the crime as
well as material and/or ‘symbolic’
reparation.[23] Material
compensation for harm caused to the victim is a “visible and largely
unambiguous part of the process” whereas
symbolic reparation is a more
complex outcome that follows a particular sequence of
events.[24] The first stage of
symbolic reparation is about offender accountability and remorse. The offender
acknowledges the harm done to the
victim by the crime, takes responsibility for
his or her actions, communicates remorse and apologises to the
victim.[25] Whereas studies show
that expressions of remorse and apology by the offender are common events in
restorative justice processes,
such features are relatively rare in legal
proceedings.[26] The second stage of
‘symbolic reparation’ looks to the response from the victim that
might indicate forgiveness.[27] For
many scholars in the field, victim forgiveness is controversial
however[28] and research in the
context of restorative programs has demonstrated that victims infrequently
accept apologies and offer forgiveness
in the course of restorative
events.[29]
In contrast to the
“inclusive and collaborative nature” of restorative justice
processes,[30] traditional criminal
proceedings are focused on the offender and punishment, unable or reluctant to
deal with victims’ needs
and
concerns.[31]
Miers’
approach to restorative justice provides a useful starting point to
consideration of VISs as restorative measures in
legal
proceedings:[32]
In broad and simple terms, restorative justice signifies those measures that are designed to give victims of crime an opportunity to tell the offender about the impact of the offending on them and their families, and to encourage offenders to accept responsibility for and to repair the harm they caused. Its general aims are to reduce the offending, to restore the relationship between the victim and the offender that was disturbed by the offence and to improve victims’ experiences with the criminal justice system.
Two significant features of a restorative measure are revealed by this approach: victim voice, and offender responsibility and accountability. With regard to a voice for victims in the resolution of the offending, clearly the expressive capacities of VISs provide victims with an opportunity to express their feelings and tell the sentencing court and offender about the personal impact of the crime.[33] Furthermore, this opportunity will be enhanced if VISs are read aloud to the court by victims or their representatives.[34] Studies have found that a majority of victims value VISs for their expressive capacities and are more likely to submit their statements to have a voice in the proceedings.[35] As to victim satisfaction, research suggests that generally crime victims have positive views about the utility of VISs; that VISs can be empowering and cathartic and provide an opportunity to be heard in the process.[36]
Nonetheless there are scholars who suggest that such a voice is also
problematic. Gewirtz argues that presenting a VIS to the court
is a “risky
and anxious activity” because there is always the chance that the story
may not be told effectively thereby
imposing “risk and anxiety on an
already vulnerable group of
people.[37] For Rock, VISs might be
damaging rituals for victims because the courtroom audience does not constitute
a group of “like-thinking,
like-feeling, supportive and sympathetic
insiders”.[38] Research into
victim satisfaction with having a voice in the hearing suggests that negative
experiences of presenting their VISs
to the court and a lack of control over
content and reception of VISs in court can detract from any potential
restorative
virtues.[39]
Commentators such as
Hoyle and Dignan are circumspect in relation to the restorative qualities of
VISs.[40] Although Hoyle describes
VISs as “restorative practices” that bring victims into the
sentencing process,[41] she argues
that in contrast to the “dynamic and relational” dialogic processes
of restorative justice where people talk
to each other, VISs do not facilitate
victim-offender dialogue in the
courtroom.[42] In the courtroom VISs
are delivered as monologues; during the process court officials and victims
rarely talk to each other and victims
and offenders do not speak to each other
at all.[43] For Dignan, this absence
of dialogue means that VISs cannot be characterised as restorative processes at
all.[44]
As to the second feature
of a restorative measure, offender responsibility and accountability, Roberts
and Erez argue that victim
disclosure through VISs can elicit emotions in
offenders that encourage them to accept responsibility, express remorse and seek
to
repair the harm caused, most notably through an apology to the victim. There
is a lack of published research regarding offenders’
subjective responses
to VISs[45] as well as the incidence
and nature of offender remorse in relation to VISs in sentencing hearings. Until
very recently the dynamics
of victim participation in the sentencing hearing
itself were generally not the subject of
study.[46] Firsthand accounts of
VISs presented in the courtroom have usually come from journalist’s
reports,[47] court transcripts,
[48] or a digital recording of a
sentencing hearing.[49] Exceptions
are recent observation studies of sentencing hearings from the
US,[50] and the
UK,[51] and publication from my own
work drawn from this study.[52] None
of the work published so far however has addressed the offenders’
responses to VISs and more particularly the incidence
of offender remorse. This
article seeks to address this gap in the research.
The
Study
The study, conducted by the author as sole researcher, was limited
to the participation of a discrete group of crime victims - the
family of the
deceased victim, or ‘family victims’ - in the sentencing of homicide
(murder or manslaughter) offenders
in the NSW Supreme Court. Section 26 of the
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999 (NSW) (CSPA), defines a
family victim as being a member of the deceased’s “immediate
family”. Since 1997, family victims in
NSW have been entitled under
legislation to submit a written VIS to the sentencing hearing in matters where
the primary victim has
died as a result of the offence. More recent amendment in
2003 provides family victims with an opportunity to read their VISs aloud
to the
sentencing court. There is no prescribed VIS form and nor is there an agency
designated to prepare VISs on behalf of the
deceased’s family. In contrast
to other common law
jurisdictions,[53] VISs from family
victims are of no relevance in the determination of penalty in
NSW.[54]
A primary object of this
study was to produce a rich and rounded picture of victim participation in the
sentencing of homicide offenders
that explored the expressive capacities of VISs
including the incidence and nature of any offender remorse. The findings
presented
draw from an analysis of data generated by the observation of 18
sentencing hearings of homicide offenders in the NSW Supreme Court
(including 30
VISs read aloud to the court) and interviews with 14 family victims.
The
hearings were observed in the NSW Supreme Court between July 2007 and December
2008. This sample did not capture all homicide
sentencing cases heard during
this period; rather it constitutes all relevant hearings that I was able to
attend. I identified appropriate
matters by their description in the court lists
as ‘sentencing submissions’ or ‘sentencing hearing’,
published
by the court the afternoon before the hearing.
[55] Of these hearings, seven offenders
had been convicted of murder, 10 offenders had been convicted of manslaughter
and one offender
had been convicted of being an accessory after the fact to
murder. A total of 38 VISs were received by the courts in these hearings
of
which 30 were read aloud. Observations were recorded in field notes and
transcribed within a few hours of the hearing. These notes
were later
supplemented with digital copies of the transcripts of 16 of the 18 hearings and
24 of the 30 VISs read aloud in those
hearings.
I interviewed 14 family
victims from 14 discrete cases between April 2007 and October
2008.[56] Twelve of the 14 interview
participants were recruited through the Homicide Victims Support Group (HVSG).
The NSW Police and HVSG
have a memorandum of understanding whereby, in the case
of homicide, the deceased’s family members are put in touch with the
HVSG
and provided with support and assistance as required. Although there is bias
inherent in being a victim support group, given
the memorandum of understanding
with the NSW police, the HVSG was the first port of call for most family victims
in NSW and it maintains
a large membership with whom it keeps in regular
contact. Furthermore, in at least six cases observed, the families were
supported
by counsellors from the HVSG. Thus, a recruitment strategy through the
HVSG promised to reach a wide range of family victims. Of
the remaining two
participants, one contacted me after reading my article about family victim
participation in the sentencing process
published in the NSW Law Society
Journal (2007) and the other was recruited through another victim support
group, Homicide Survivors Support after Murder.
Eleven of the interview
participants submitted a VIS to the NSW Supreme Court in a homicide sentencing.
Of the remaining three cases,
in two matters the offender was found not guilty
of murder by reason of mental illness and there was no sentencing hearing. The
family
victims involved in these matters had since submitted VISs to the Mental
Health Tribunal review hearings. In the final case, the
deceased’s family
elected not to submit a VIS to the sentencing hearing though various family
members attended each day of
the trial and sentencing. The interview
participants were predominantly women (n=12) although on two occasions the woman
was accompanied
by her male partner who also contributed to the discussion. At
the time of interviews, seven participants lived in Sydney and seven
lived in
rural or coastal areas of NSW.
A grounded theory model using a
constant, comparative approach was adopted as a basis for analysis of this
data.[57]
An important caveat is
that as a small in-depth study of victim participation in homicide sentencing in
the NSW Supreme Court, the
extent to which the results can be considered to be
of more general application is limited. The study however is not intended to
be
representative of victim participation in the sentencing of homicide offenders
more generally; rather its nature is exploratory
and designed to illuminate the
nature and dynamics of participation of family victims in select sentencing
hearings. The findings
will highlight issues for future research in NSW and
other common law jurisdictions.
The Conceptualisation of Offender
Remorse
The first step was to devise a conceptual framework within which
to explore the nature and incidence of offender remorse in the hearings
observed. Initial analysis suggested a distinction between two concepts of
offender remorse that are characterised as ‘offender-focused
remorse’ and ‘victim-focused remorse’.
Offender-focused
remorse is a legal construct. According to sentencing law, evidence of
contrition demonstrated by the offender with
regard to the offence can be
presented to the court aiming to mitigate punishment. If accepted as genuine,
the sentencing judge can
reduce the severity of the penalty imposed. Section
21A(3) of the CSPA provides that in order to mitigate penalty, the
offender must provide evidence of remorse that indicates he or she has:
(i) accepted responsibility for his or her actions; and
(ii) acknowledged any injury, loss or damage caused by his or her actions and/or made reparation for such injury, loss or damage.
Remorse as a
mitigating factor must be established by the offender on the balance of
probabilities[58] and the degree to
which the offender has demonstrated remorse, if at all, is a question of fact to
be determined by the sentencing
judge.[59] According to the NSW
Court of Criminal Appeal in Georgopolous v R, “the key notion
conveyed by the concept of remorse is a common sense one...it is regret or
sorrow for the
wrongdoing”.[60] Such remorse
can be demonstrated by the offender through his or her sworn evidence or by
other words and conduct such as an early
confession, the provision of assistance
to the authorities, statements to a probation and parole officer included in a
pre-sentencing
report, making reparation to the victim and/or letter of apology
from the offender to the victim and/or to the
court.[61] The offender can also
rely on evidence of his or her remorse as conveyed through the direct oral
evidence of third parties such
as expert
witnesses.[62] While it is not
necessary for the offender to give oral evidence of remorse to satisfy the
section,[63] evidence provided in
documentary form such as a letter to the court or conveyed through counsel from
the bar table may not be viewed
by the court as particularly convincing.
[64]
For the purposes of this
study, such remorse is characterised as ‘offender-focused’ because,
essentially, it is evidence
led to mitigate the severity of the penalty imposed
on the offender. The law does not require the offender to also express remorse
to the victim before the penalty can be mitigated. Though a contentious
sentencing factor in legal
scholarship,[65] the cases suggest
that a finding that the offender is remorseful is related to forward-looking
goals relevant to questions of offender
rehabilitation and
desistance.[66]
‘Victim-focused
remorse’ is a restorative construct derived from the theory that that
confrontation with VISs in a sentencing
hearing might induce the offender to
accept responsibility and apologise to the victim for the harm that has been
caused by the crime.
For the purposes of this study, such offender remorse is
characterised as ‘victim-focused’ because it is directed to
the
victim’s suffering rather than the court or the crime more
generally.
The Incidence and Nature of Offender Remorse in the
Observation Study
Drawing on the elements of offender-focused and
victim-focused remorse discussed above, a scale of offender remorse was designed
that
comprises three distinct elements: responsibility for the crime, contrition
for the killing and apology to the family victim for
the harm they have
suffered. Responsibility or acceptance of guilt is at the lower end of the scale
and relates to the extent to
which the offender has ‘faced up’ to
his or her actions in killing the deceased as revealed by the offender’s
account
of his or her culpability at trial or during plea
negotiation.[67] Acceptance of
responsibility is an element of both offender-focused and victim-focused remorse
and analysis of the hearings has investigated
the extent to which the offenders
have distanced themselves from the crime by way of defence, justification and/or
excuse.[68] This element is also
relevant to the conditions under which remorse is displayed in the
hearing.
Contrition is characterised as offender acknowledgment of the harm
caused by the offence and demonstration of regret and/or sorrow
for the killing.
Such contrition is presented to the court as evidence in mitigation and can
include an apology to the court for
killing the deceased. For the purposes of
this analysis contrition directed to the court is distinct from an apology
directed to
the family victim. An apology as conceptualised here, is either a
communicative act containing the words ‘sorry’ or
‘apologise’
that is directed to the deceased’s family, or
other explicit acknowledgment of harm caused to the deceased’s family .
[69]
The findings are summarised
in the table below and include the court response to any evidence of
remorse.
Figure 1: The nature and incidence of offender remorse
demonstrated in the homicide sentencing hearings observed in the study.
Case
|
Acceptance of Responsibility
|
Contrition
|
Apology
|
Court Response
|
1
|
Charge of murder. Pleaded G to charge shortly before hearing due to
commence; mental illness.
|
None
|
None
|
|
2
|
Charge ofbeing accessory after fact to murder; offered guilty plea at
earliest opportunity.
|
None
|
None
|
|
3
|
Charge or murder; pleaded NG to charge; convicted of manslaughter by jury,
substantial impairment.[70]
|
None
|
None
|
|
4
|
Charge of murder; offered guilty plea at earliest opportunity; alleged
deceased provocation mental, physical and sexual abuse.
|
Oral evidence of offender
Q: Are you sorry for the fact that you killed [the deceased]? A: Yes. If I could, I’d go back and change it, not do it. |
Oral evidence of offender:
Q: How did hearing [VISs] make you feel? A: I was upset, terribly ashamed of my actions, and I couldn’t believe that I have caused so much pain to someone |
Not accepted: “I am not persuaded that this somewhat belated
statement indicates any genuine contrition or even insight into
the enormity of
what he has done.”
|
5
|
Charge of murder; Crown accepted plea to manslaughter on basis of
substantial impairment; alleged provocative acts of deceased.
|
Oral evidence of lay witness: “he is emotional and teary eyed when he
speaks about it”. Acknowledged pain caused.
|
None
|
Accepted: “I am satisfied that the offender is truly remorseful and
contrite over what he did.”
|
6
|
Charge of manslaughter; G plea to manslaughter dangerous act at earliest
opportunity; alleged deceased used provocative words.
|
Oral evidence of offender: “I am shocked that I have done it. I am
fully aware of my emotions and where it has led me and the
pain I have caused
especially to family and friends”. Oral evidence of lay witness.
|
None
|
Accepted: “I take the view that the offender has displayed remorse.
He has expressed it to his mother and to others: and to
a lesser extent, in
court.”
|
7
|
Charge of murder; Crown accepted (late) G plea to manslaughter (unlawful
and dangerous act); shifted blame to co-accused; alleged
not planner and
instigator; alcoholic and dysfunctional family.
|
Through counsel from the bar table: “The offender instructs me that
he wishes to apologise sincerely to the family of the deceased,
to the court, to
his parents and to the community generally.”
|
Through counsel.
|
Not accepted: “This is not a submission that I am prepared to accept,
not only because the offender was not prepared to frankly
say so and be tested
on his account...but because there is substantial evidence to the
contrary.”
|
8
|
Charge or murder; pleased NG to charge; no admissions.
|
None
|
None
|
|
9
|
Charge of murder; pleaded NG to charge; no admissions.
|
None
|
None
|
|
10
|
Charge of murder; G plea to charge at earliest opportunity; intoxication,
history of domestic violence
|
Oral evidence of offender: I am really very sorry for what I have done. I
am just really really sorry for what I have done to [deceased].
Letter to
court.
|
None
|
Accepted: “There is no question but that the offender is genuinely
remorseful about his conduct”.
|
11
|
Charge of murder; NG plea to murder (early offer to plead to manslaughter);
convicted of manslaughter (by jury) on basis of excessive
self-defence.
|
Oral evidence of offender
Pre-sentence report. |
Oral evidence of offender
Q: You have heard the VISs read by a woman on behalf of [X], you have heard a VIS read by [dec’s mother] and by [dec’s partner]? A: Yes. Q: During the course of the trial you expressed in terms how you felt about being responsible for [dec’s] death? A; Yes. Q: Is there anything else that you want to tell them or the court? A: [crying] Yeah, I am sorry, I am sorry. I have a son and I can only – I couldn’t imagine what it would feel like to lose him. I feel for the [dec’s partner] so much and [dec’s] family. Nothing I do will take it back, I know that. |
Accepted to an extent: “I accept that there is some evidence of
recent remorse although it is mixed with an element of
self-justification”.
|
12
|
Charge of murder; NG plea to charge (provocation/substantial impairment);
convicted of murder; intoxicated; deceased alleged to be
intoxicated and
abusive.
|
Oral evidence of expert witness.
Q: Has offender...expressed to you remorse for what he did? A: yes, consistently from the first time I saw him and it appears to be genuine remorse. He says that he wishes he could turn back the clock that it hadn’t happened, that the man hadn’t died. |
None
|
Accepted: “I am satisfied that the prisoner is
remorseful”.
|
13
|
Charge of murder; G plea to charge before hearing on basis of mental
illness; intoxication.
|
Oral evidence of lay witnesses.
Medical report; Letter to the court. |
None
|
Accepted: “The prisoner is genuinely remorseful for his actions...he
is suffering substantially for his crime”.
|
14
|
Charge of murder; NG plea to charge (early offer to plead to manslaughter);
trial for murder, hung jury; Crown then accepted plea
to manslaughter on basis
of substantial impairment. Alleged deceased violent and abusive.
|
Oral evidence of offender at trial.
|
None
|
Accepted:
|
15
|
Charge of murder; NG plea to charge (though accept responsibility for
killing); convicted of manslaughter at trial, substantial impairment.
|
None
|
None
|
Found that the offender accepting responsibility for the killing did not
demonstrate contrition but a willingness to facilitate the
course of
justice.
|
16
|
Charge of murder; NG plea to charge; convicted at trial of manslaughter on
basis of gross negligence.
|
None
|
None
|
|
17
|
Charge of manslaughter; G plea to charge (unlawful and unlawful act).
|
None
|
None
|
|
18
|
Charge of murder; NG plea to charge (offer to plead to manslaughter);
convicted of manslaughter at trial (unlawful and dangerous act);
intoxicated;
alleged self-defence and provocation.
|
Letter from offender to court.
|
Letter from the offender read to the court: He was “devastated”
and said he was “sorry” to the deceased’s
family and his own
family: “this letter comes from my heart”.
|
Accepted to small extent: “He (the offender) did not give evidence in
the proceedings so the weight to be given to the letter
is not
great”.
|
With regard to acceptance of responsibility, two offenders denied
responsibility altogether (hearings 8 and 9) while the remaining
offenders
provided accounts that sought to explain, justify or mitigate their culpability
in the killing. In some six matters (4,
5, 6, 12, 14, 18) the offenders
attempted to shift some of the blame for the crime to the deceased on the basis
of provocation and/or
self-defence; in hearing 7, the offender attempted to
shift the bulk of the blame onto his co-accused on the basis that the latter
was
the planner and instigator of the crime. Many offenders also sought to mitigate
their culpability for a variety of personal circumstances
including mental
illness (n=6) and intoxication at the time of the killing (n=4).
It is clear
that apology did not play a significant role in the hearings observed and most
of the remorse demonstrated by offenders
can be characterised as
offender-focused.[71] As detailed
in the table, evidence of contrition with regard to the killing was led in
mitigation by offenders in just over half
of the matters (n=10) in a variety of
forms: direct oral evidence by offenders (n=5); letter from offender to the
court (n=3); direct
oral evidence of third parties (n=4); written reports of
third parties (n=2); and by counsel (n=1). While 10 offenders did express
some
form of contrition to the court for the killing (offender-focused remorse),
victim-focused remorse or remorse directed to the
family victims was
demonstrated in only four hearings (hearings 4, 7, 11 and 18). Victim-focused
remorse was evidenced by the use
of the word ‘sorry’ in relation to
the harm sustained by the deceased’s family or other expressions of
remorse
that directly acknowledged the harm that was caused to the
deceased’s family rather than the deceased or community more generally.
Only in hearings 4 and 11 was the word ‘sorry’ uttered personally by
the offenders; in hearing 7 the apology was offered
through defence counsel
while in hearing 18, the offender’s apology was contained in a letter to
the court. It is important
to note that these apologies were not offered
contemporaneously with the presentation of the VISs; in fact, all were tendered
later
in the proceedings during sentence submissions and the presentation of
mitigating evidence.
This rarity of victim-focused remorse is consistent
with a striking feature of most of the hearings observed: the vast majority of
offenders were not observed to respond to the VISs at all. Four offenders in the
study were not observed to look at the family victims
at all as the VISs were
read to the court, sitting instead in the dock with their heads bowed or their
eyes downcast (hearings 1,
4, 10 and 12). In six other matters (5, 7, 8, 13, 16
and 18), while the offenders were observed to look at the victims or their
agents
who read the statements to the court, they otherwise remained impassive.
These findings are consistent with Rock’s study where
he found the
offenders observed to be largely “remote, inscrutable, impassive”
while the VISs were presented.[72]
This does not mean of course that offenders did not experience an emotional
response to the statements they heard; but what it does
mean is that no response
from offenders was visible to the family victims and others in the
courtroom.
Only three offenders showed any sort of response while the
statements were being read (hearings, 9, 11 and 15). During the presentation
of
VISs in hearing 9, the offender sat in the dock leaning forward, watching the
family victims intently as they read, and appearing
to listen with interest to
their statements. The offender in hearing 15 watched the agent read the
deceased’s mother’s
statement and was observed to smirk on one
occasion when the reader referred to the deceased’s personal qualities.
It was
only the offender in hearing 11 who exhibited any outward sign of the
emotional transformation posited by Roberts and Erez as he
cried audibly while
he watched and listened to the family victims read their statements to the
court.
These findings are also consistent with the experiences of most of
the interview participants; only two interview participants said
that the
offender apologised to them at the sentencing hearing or otherwise indicated
remorse for the loss sustained by the deceased’s
families (discussed
further below).
Discussion
While by these findings no claim is
made as to the subjective emotional responses of the offenders observed it is
evident that victim-focused
remorse was not demonstrated by the vast majority of
offenders whether in response to VISs or otherwise. The aim of this part is
to
identify a number of factors that singly or in combination might explain this
finding.
First, sentencing hearings are highly structured legal proceedings,
the nature of which does little to encourage or even allow meaningful
apologies
and expressions of remorse from offenders to
victims.[73] In the hearings
observed, the oral VISs were read aloud as monologues to the court and did not
generate discussion. Judges did not
offer offenders the opportunity to respond
to the deceased’s family after the statements were presented. Nor were
offenders
provided with opportunities for face-to-face apologies or expressions
of remorse directed to the family victims. In those hearings
where the offender
did offer a verbal apology to the family victims during the hearing (4 and 11),
the apologies were mediated by
legal representatives, facilitated by the
question and answer format of oral evidence. Oral evidence is an interaction
between the
offender and defence counsel for the benefit of the judge to
evaluate the offender’s credibility. Thus the expressions of remorse
were
not offered to the victims in the dyadic relation envisaged by Tavuchis whereby
apologies are made directly to the injured
party;[74] instead the family
victims sat behind the business of the hearing with the
public.[75]
Second, it might be
inferred from the progress of the case that the offender is not sorry at all. In
the hearings observed, the conduct
of defence cases was more geared to leading
evidence of offender-focused remorse because this is what might reduce the
severity of
the penalty to be imposed and in homicide cases where potential
penalties are harsh the stakes are high for offenders. Consequently,
offender
accounts of defence, justification and/or excuse put forward to reduce
culpability (and thereby penalty) are unlikely to
establish conditions for a
meaningful apology to family
victims.[76]
Third, the formal
and intimidating nature of the courtroom environment might also constrain
emotional expression on the part of
offenders.[77] Offenders might lack
the personal skills necessary to communicate an apology or remorse to family
victims. They might be embarrassed,
inarticulate, lack confidence, lack support,
and/or fear humiliation.[78] In
hearing 12 for instance, while the court accepted that the offender was
remorseful, it is likely that his intellectual disability
and lack of
proficiency in English would have severely hampered his ability to offer express
to the deceased’s family even
if he had wanted to apologise.
It also
might be the case that some offenders did not experience feelings of remorse or
empathy in response to VISs. While there is
a lack of research regarding
offenders’ emotional responses to VISs, studies in relation to
offenders’ emotional responses
to victim impact training programs have
been done in the US.[79] Victim
impact training programs (VITs) are designed to teach offenders about the impact
of crime on the victim and wider
community.[80] Participation by
victims and victim service providers are key elements in the programs. VITs aim
to generate emotional responses
in participating offenders so that those
offenders feel guilt, remorse and shame for their behaviour. It is anticipated
that such
emotional responses may cause the offender to develop some level of
empathy and thus, be less likely to
reoffend.[81] Jackson and Bonacker
conducted a study of the emotional impact of victim impact training programs in
a US jurisdiction on adult offenders
on probation or parole. They found that the
10 week course had little or no effect on the development of the
offenders’ emotional
responses and furthermore, if there was a response,
female offenders were more likely to develop an empathic response than their
male counterparts.[82] Extrapolating
from these findings, VISs may not produce the desired emotional impact on many
offenders.
Finally, a complicating factor in the context of homicide cases
might be a pre-existing relationship between the deceased’s
family and the
offender the nature of which could obstruct adequate and/or genuine apology. In
at least six matters observed, prior
to the killing the family victims and the
offenders had been in family relationships and the obvious antipathy between the
parties,
particularly in hearings 10 and 13 was such that an apology would have
been unlikely in ordinary social circumstances.
Is Victim-Focused
Remorse a Virtue in Sentencing Hearings?
Although the potential for
victim-focused remorse is regarded by some theorists as a positive aspect
associated with VISs, scholars
have pointed out that many of the claims made in
relation to apologies in both restorative justice and criminal justice settings
have not been tested.[83] The
findings of this study also raise a question as to whether in fact
victim-focused remorse in the context of homicide sentencing
is indeed a virtue
for victims. This section will explore first the constraints on the adequacy and
sincerity of victim-focused remorse
in the sentencing hearing and second,
whether the demonstration of such remorse is appropriate at this stage in the
context of homicide.
Apologies are such complex and fragile processes that
adequate and/or genuine apologies are “difficult to achieve”
particularly
in the event of criminal
harms.[84] Merely saying
“I’m sorry” is unlikely to be sufficient or perceived as
sincere in the context of more serious
wrongs.[85] Murphy argues:
What works for small wrongs is likely to be unacceptable for wrongs of
greater magnitude, however. For grave wrongs, we – both
victims and
spectators – normally expect more...something more than mere apology. We
expect such things as repentance, remorse...and
atonement; and we are generally
interested in apologies only to the degree that we believe that there are
sincere external signs
of repentance and remorse and reliable indicators of
future atonement.[86]
Similarly,
in a restorative justice context dealing with serious offences, Shapland et al
found that more was required from the offender
to convey meaningful remorse than
just the word ‘sorry’; in their view the offender’s remorse
should be “backed
up” by actions that show the offender is acting to
change his or her life.[87]
According to Szmania and Mangis, “given the restriction of the
courtroom context both procedurally and interpersonally”,
even if the
offender does attempt to communicate an apology or remorse “the effort
will likely to be incomplete or
inadequate”.[88] Consistent
with this statement, Coral and Sharon, the two interview participants who
received apologies in the sentencing hearing,
expressed contempt and anger that
the offender had apologised at all and neither considered the apology genuine.
Coral was told that
because the Crown had accepted the offender’s plea to
manslaughter, the offender had to apologise to the family for what he
had done.
Coral admits she had no interest in what the offender had to say but thought
“I’ll kick myself if I don’t
listen”. As she listened to
his apology, she thought “Bullshit, how dare you insult us more!”
Likewise, Sharon
was scathing about the offender’s apology offered in
evidence: “To have him sit across in his little box and say sorry...I
said
sorry is not good enough, I said bullshit. I was angry.”
Neither Coral
nor Sharon accepted that the apologies offered by the offenders were genuine in
the circumstances. Similarly the reactions
of family victims in hearing 11
(discussed further below) also suggested that they doubted the sincerity of the
apology offered by
the offender. While there is little research in relation to
apologies from offenders to victims in a sentencing
context,[89] recent studies have
addressed this issue in the context of restorative justice schemes. Daly’s
study of two Australian restorative
justice schemes found that victim and
offender participants interpreted each other’s words and actions
differently.[90] While over 60% of
the participating offenders said their apology was genuine, only 30% of those
apologies were regarded as sincere
by the victims. In an evaluation of three
restorative justice schemes in England and Wales, researchers found that
apologies from
offender were common but “immediate acknowledgment by
victims that they accepted the apology was rarer” because in the
context
of serious offences more is required of the offender than just
words.[91] Following a review of
conflicting studies relating to the sincerity of apologies, Dignan concludes
that “there are limits on
the victim’s willingness to see
offender’s in a positive
light”.[92]
In the context
of homicide sentencing, it is contended that family victims are more likely to
be sceptical and less willing to see
the offender in a positive light. First,
given the nature of sentencing law, victim-focused remorse could be perceived as
self-serving,
motivated by a desire to mitigate penalty rather than sincere
regret or sorrow for the harm caused to the deceased’s family.
In the
hearings observed, victim-focused remorse was linked to submissions regarding
mitigation of penalty which could have reinforced
such an impression. Moreover,
it is likely that the conditions established by the progress of the cases worked
against the family
victims accepting the victim-focused remorse as adequate
and/or genuine. In three of the matters (4, 11 and 18) the offenders had
sought
to shift some of the blame for the killing to the deceased and in hearing 7,
evidence of particularly negative remarks made
by the offender about the
deceased was presented to the court. In such circumstances, the words
“I’m sorry” without
additional evidence of remorse or
atonement[93] are likely to be
viewed as self-serving rather than sincere. Certainly the court was not
satisfied that the offenders were genuinely
remorseful in hearings 4 and 7, and
doubt was cast over the adequacy and sincerity of the offenders’
expressions of remorse
in hearings 11 and 18 (see Figure 1 above).
The
delivery of victim-focused remorse in the sentencing hearing through
intermediaries is also likely to be inadequate and militate
against a belief
that the apology is sincere. According to Tavuchis, it is not possible to
“delegate or consign” an
apology without altering its
meaning[94] and for Daly an
important aspect of a sincere apology is “a genuine display of regret and
sorrow”.[95] Because neither
offender in hearings 7 or 18 presented their evidence of victim-focused remorse
orally to the court there was no
personal display of regret or sorrow that could
be evaluated by the family victims. Even though the offenders in hearings 4 and
11
did express their victim-focused remorse in oral evidence, that
evidence was not directed to the family victims who sat behind the court
in the
public gallery. There was no face to face interaction between the offender and
victim that Tavuchis argues is so important
for a genuine apology.
Thus, in
the hearings observed, while the subjective opinions of the family victims are
not known the findings suggest that the victim-focused
remorse offered by
offenders was regarded with the same degree of scepticism as was shown by Coral
and Sharon. Certainly none of
the family victims indicated that they accepted
the apology from the offender; the family victims in hearings 4 and 18 cried
quietly
in the public gallery and the deceased’s family looked down in
hearing 7. In hearing 11 where the offender also cried as he
said how sorry he
was, the deceased’s family sat dry-eyed and stony-faced in the public
gallery giving the appearance of rejecting
the
offender.[96]
This discussion
raises the final issue as to whether victim-focused remorse is indeed something
even sought by family victims in the
sentencing hearing. Studies of victim
satisfaction with VISs do not appear to have reported on the issue of
victim-focused remorse
in the
courtroom.[97] The family victims
interviewed in this study did not raise victim-focused remorse as an important
issue for discussion and nor did
they appear generally interested in apologies
or other expressions of remorse from the offender. Laura, one of the few
interview
participants who talked about remorse (and also observed in the
courtroom), said that if she had looked for remorse from the offender
and it was
not forthcoming, she would have felt worse:
As far as I’m concerned he probably did not feel any remorse or
anything like that. If I appealed to him and I don’t see
any signs of
remorse it will only make it worse so I was of the opinion that I wasn’t
going to appeal to him; as far as I was
concerned, he was nothing to
me.
Turning to research in the restorative justice context, although Strang
argues that victims want an apology from
offenders,[98] there are studies
that suggest receiving an apology is not a major reason for victims to
participate in a restorative
event.[99] Umbreit et al’s
study of participation of victims of serious violent offences (including
homicide) in US victim-offender schemes
looked at reasons why victims chose to
participate in the programs. At the top of the list was the desire for
information and answers
(58%) and the second most important reason was wanting
to show the offender the impact of the offence (43%); only 18% wanted to know
if
the offender was remorseful (18%). While these findings show that some victims
of violent crime are interested in communicating
with the offender, it does not
show how important, if at all, an apology from the offender might be. Thus on
the basis of this research
and interview findings, it might be inferred that
family victims are not necessarily looking for an apology or victim-focused
remorse
at the sentencing hearing.
Furthermore, Tavuchis argues that there
are ‘apologetic thresholds’ whereby the heinous nature of an offence
takes it
beyond the purview of
apology.[100] While it is not
suggested that homicide offences are necessarily so heinous, it may be that the
sentencing hearing is not the appropriate
forum for expressions of
victim-focused remorse. Studies have shown that the legal processes can be
disheartening, alienating and
require significant energy from crime victims and
these experiences could only be exacerbated in the context of homicide (Rock
1998).
At the time the hearings were observed, the killing was still a
relatively fresh event and, as they presented their VISs, it was
clear that most
of the family victims were still grieving and angry and arguably not ready to
hear any expressions of remorse from
the offender. For example in hearing 11,
the deceased’s sister told the offender:
I am sure there has been a hideously high price paid to secure what you
[offender] would see as a favourable verdict for you in this
murder
trial.[101] These are tremendous
debts that I myself feel you [offender] are responsible and accountable for. In
my eyes, you have not in any
shape or form, even begun to pay for these
debts.
In the same hearing, the deceased’s mother made it quite clear
that she was not interested in an apology: “Your actions
are beyond my
comprehension, and I will never condone or forgive such an
atrocity”.
Research of predictors for participation of victims of
violent offences (including homicide) in US victim-offender reconciliation
programs suggests that the more time that has passed after the commission of a
violent offence, the more likely that victims of those
offences will
participate.[102] In a study of
victim-offender mediation programs in two US states, the researchers found that
many victims “who would never
have considered such a meeting in the
immediate aftermath of the crime changed their minds over the
years”.[103] Because victims
of violent crimes are not usually looking for material compensation, Umbreit et
al argue that the time lapse is important
because victims of violent crimes go
through stages of coping and may not be ready to face the offender at an early
stage. Although
it is impossible to generalise about the needs of family
victims, drawing on Umbreit et al’s research and the findings of this
study, it is suggested that the sentencing hearing is probably too soon in the
grieving process for the family victim to be receptive
to victim-focused remorse
from the offender.
Conclusion
It has been claimed that
disclosure of victim suffering as a result of crime through VISs has the
potential to produce an emotional
response in offenders that creates an
opportunity for offenders to express remorse and apologise to crime victims in
the sentencing
hearing. Furthermore, it is implicit in this claim that the
incidence of such victim-focused remorse is a virtue and positive restorative
element of VISs. Drawing from an analysis of data generated by observation of 18
sentencing hearings in the NSW Supreme Court and
supplemented with interviews
with 14 family victims, this study has produced valuable insight into the
incidence and nature of offender
remorse in the sentencing of homicide offenders
and the ‘restorative’ elements of VISs in this respect. The study
findings
reveal that, contrary to claims made by scholars, VISs did not appear
to generate victim-focused remorse in most cases and in fact,
other than one
case (hearing 11), offenders appeared largely unresponsive to the statements
generally. Consistent with research,
it is likely that the form and processes of
the sentencing hearings observed as well as the nature of the subject offences,
did not
support an environment that encouraged the expression of sincere
victim-focused remorse.
The study findings also suggest that in any event,
expressions of victim-remorse may not be the virtue as envisaged by theorists,
at least in the context of sentencing homicide offenders. The fragile and
complex nature of meaningful apologies means that the form
and nature of
sentencing hearings and the timing inevitably constrain the making of both
adequate and sincere apologies. Studies
of participation of victims in
restorative practices outside the courtroom, suggest that it may be that victims
are not looking for
an apology from the offender and/or that the sentencing
hearing is too soon. In light of claims relating to the ‘restorative
value’ of VISs, this is an important area for future research. Such
research should consider utilising courtroom observation,
a data source that has
been little utilised in this field, and perhaps more controversially, seek the
perspectives of the offender
whose voice has not been yet heard with respect to
this debate.
List of Cases
Ali v R [2010] NSWCCA
35
Alvares v R; Farache v R [2011] NSWCCA 33
Georgopolous v R
[2010] NSWCCA 246, 11
R v Butters [2010] NSWCCA 1
R v Elfar
[2003] NSWCCA 358
R v Olbrich [1999] HCA 54; (1999) 199 CLR 270
R v
Previtera (1997) 94 A Crim LR 76
R v Veatufunga [2007]NSWCCA
54
Sun v R [2011] NSWCCA 99
List of
Legislation
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999
(NSW)
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B., Coates, RB., et al (2006),‘Victims of Severe Violence in Mediated
Dialogue With Offender: The Impact
of The First Multi-Site Study in the
US’, International Review of Victimology, 13: 27-48.
Victim
Support Agency, (2009), A Victim's Voice. Victoria: Victims Support
Agency.
Walklate, S. (2007), Imagining the Victim of Crime.UK:
Open University Press.
Walklate, S. (2012), ‘Courting Compassion:
Victims, Policy, and the Question of Justice’, The Howard Journal of
Criminal Justice, 51: 109-121.
Wyrick, P. and Costanzo, M. (1999),
‘Predictors of Client Participation in Victim-Offender Mediation’,
Mediation Quarterly, 16: 253-267.
[1] See Henderson (1985); Garland
(2001); Jackson (2003); Goodey (2005); Walklate
(2012).
[2] See Shapland, Willmore
and Duff (1985); Goodey (2005).
[3]
Henderson (1985); Ashworth (1993); Bandes (1996), (2009); Hoyle et al (1998);
Erez (2000); Booth (2007); Kirchenghast (2011); Hoyle
(2011); Rock
(2010).
[4] See Austin (2010); Rock
(2010); VSA (2009).
[5] Sumner
(1999); Kirchengast (2008); Roberts and Manikis (2010); Shackel
(2011).
[6] Booth (2007); Bandes
(1996); Schuster and Propen
(2010)
[7] Ashworth (1993); Sanders
et al (2001); Henderson (1985)
[8]
Erez (2004).
[9] Erez (2004);
Roberts and Erez (2004),( 2010); Hoyle (2010); Erez et al
(2011).
[10] Roberts and Erez
(2004), (2010).
[11] Cassell
(2009).
[12] Cassell (2009);
Roberts and Erez (2004),
(2011).
[13] Stubbs (2007), 169;
Roberts and Erez (2004),
232.
[14] Roberts and Erez
(2004), p 232.
[15] Blecher
(2010). 97-98; Petrucci (2002), 352; Bibas and Bierschbach (2004), p
8.
[16] Roberts and Erez (2004),
(2010).
[17] Daly (2011), p
4.
[18] See Braithwaite and
Strang (2001); Strang (2002); Shapland et al (2006); Dignan (2007); Walklate
(2007); Hoyle (2010).
[19] Strang
(2002); Hoyle (2010).
[20] Strang
(2002); Dignan (2007); Hoyle
(2010).
[21] Shapland (2006);
Goodey (2005).
[22] Shapland et
al (2006).
[23] Daly (2011);
Szmania and Mangis (2005).
[24]
Daly (2011), p 28.
[25] Strang
(2002); Shapland et al (2006); Walklate (2007); Szmania and Mangis
(2005).
[26] Szmania and Mangis
(2005); Shapland (2006); Bibas and Bierschbach(
2006).
[27] Dignan (2007);
Shapland et al (2006); Daly
(2011).
[28] Stubbs (2007).
[29] Dignan (2007), p
321
[30] Hoyle (2010), p
2.
[31] Szmania and Mangis
(2005); Hoyle (2010).
[32] Miers
(2001). p 8.
[33] Roberts and
Erez (2004); Szmania and Gracyalny (2006); Booth
(2012).
[34] Szmania and
Gracyalny (2006); Victim Support Agency (2009); Rock (2010); Roberts and Manikis
(2011); Booth (2012).
[35] Erez
et al (1994); Chalmers et al (2007); Victim Support Agency
(2009).
[36] Roberts and Manikis
(2011), p 25; Erez et al
(2011).
[37] Gewirtz (1995). p
882.
[38] Rock (2010), p
219.
[39] Meredith and Paquette
(2001); Victim Support Agency (2009); Rock (2010); Erez et al (2011); Booth
(2011).
[40] Dignan (2007); Hoyle
(2010).
[41] Hoyle (2011). p
15.
[42] Hoyle (2011), p 14; see
also Dignan (2007), p 311.
[43]
Hoyle (2010), p 15; see also Booth
(2012).
[44] Dignan (2007), p
311.
[45] Roberts and Manikis
(2011).
[46] Shapland and Hall
(2010)
[47] Logan
(2008).
[48] Logan
(2008).
[49] Szmania and
Gracyalny (2006).
[50] Propen and
Schuster (2008), (2010).
[51]
Rock (2010).
[52] Booth
(2012).
[53] Kirchengast (2011);
Roberts and Manikis (2010).
[54]
R v Previtera (1997) 94 A Crim LR 76; for contrasting views of the legal
position in NSW see Booth (2007) and Kirchengast
(2011).
[55] Guided by the
published court lists, I did attend other hearings but these were not included
in my study either because they were
adjourned, dealt with a non-homicide matter
and/or were closed courts because the offender was a
juvenile.
[56] Only one family
victim interviewed was also observed in the courtroom. The focus of this study
was the hearings observed; the interview
data provided valuable context for
victims’ experiences both inside and outside the sentencing
hearing.
[57] Charmaz
(2006).
[58] R v
Olbrich[1999] HCA 54; (1999) 199 CLR
270.
[59] Alvares v R; Farache
v R [2011] NSWCCA 33,
65.
[60] [2010] NSWCCA 246,
11.
[61] Alvares v R; Farache
v R [2011] NSWCCA 33,
66.
[62] Sun v R [2011]
NSWCCA 99.
[63] R v Butters
[2010] NSWCCA 1.
[64] R v
Elfar [2003] NSWCCA 358.
[65]
Bagaric and Amarasekara (2001); Bibas and Bierschbach (2004); Tudor
(2005).
[66] Ali v R
[2010] NSWCCA 35; Bibas and Bierschbach (2004), p
8.
[67] Goffman (1971), p
109-110.
[68] Goffman (1971), p
110; Tavuchis (1991), p
22-23.
[69] Szmania and Mangis
(2006), p 338; Shapland et al (2006), p 514; Goffman (1971), p 109; Tavuchis
(1991), p 22.
[70] A finding of
substantial impairment under s23A Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) reduced a charge
of murder to a conviction for
manslaughter.
[71] Bibas and
Bierschbach (2004); Szmania and Mangis
(2005).
[72] Rock (2010), p
219.
[73] Bibas and Bierschbach
(2004), p 12; see also Szmania and Mangis (2005), p
341.
[74] Tavuchis (1991), p
49.
[75] see also Bibas and
Bierschbach (2004), p 53.
[76]
Tavuchis (1991), p 17-19.
[77]
Szmania and Mangis (2005); Bibas and Bierschbach
(2004).
[78] Szmania and Mangis
(2005), p 340-341.
[79] Jackson
and Bonacker, (2006).
[80]
Jackson and Bonacker,
(2006).
[81] Jackson and Bonacker
(2006), p 30.
[82] Jackson and
Bonacker (2006), p 319.
[83]
Stubbs (2007); Petrucci
(2002).
[84] Daly (2011), p 46;
see also Murphy (2006).
[85]
Murphy (2006).
[86] Murphy
(2006), p371.
[87] Shapland et al
(2006), p 514.
[88] Szmania and
Mangis (2005), p 356.
[89]
Szmania and Mangis (2005); though see Strang, (2002), p
18-19.
[90] Daly (2005), p
223.
[91] Shapland et al (2006),
p 514.
[92] Dignan (2007), p
321.
[93] Additional evidence in
these circumstances might be contributing to the costs of the deceased’s
funeral or offering the deceased’s
family an apology in accordance with
particular cultural mores outside the court. For an example see R v
Veatufunga [2007]NSWCCA
54.
[94] Tavuchis (1991), p
49.
[95] Daly (2011), p
46.
[96] Tavuchis (1991). p
23.
[97] I have been unable to
find any mention of apology or offender remorse in the review of the existing
research relating to VISs by
Roberts and Manikis or in specific studies
including the recent report from the Victim Support Agency, 2009,
[98] Strang (2002), p
19.
[99] Dignan (2007), p 320;
Umberit et al (2006).
[100]
Tavuchis (1991), p21.
[101] In
this case, the offender was acquitted of murder and convicted of manslaughter on
the basis of excessive
self-defence.
[102] Wyrick and
Costanzo (1999); Umbreit et al
(2006).
[103] Umbreit et al
(2006), p 45.
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