Bipartisan Bill Would Bolster Crime Victims’ Rights Protections, Prevent Secret Plea Deals
Washington,
January 17, 2020
If federal prosecutors re-victimize innocent victims – as Epstein’s horrific plea deal did – they must be held accountable, in a timely fashion. This legislation would give our justice system vital tools to prevent such gross miscarriages of injustice from being repeated. His victims deserve to know that no one will suffer the way they have again.
Washington D.C. – Prosecutors would face more severe sanctions and judges could better protect crime victims’ rights under a new bipartisan bill filed today which would prevent any other gross injustice like the one that allowed serial pedophile Jeffrey Epstein to elude true punishment for more than a decade. The Crime Victims’ Rights Act of 2020 was filed today by U.S. Reps. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-23) and James Sensenbrenner (WI-5), two of the most prominent victim advocates in Congress. Wasserman Schultz has led the call for accountability and investigation into the egregious Epstein plea deal, and Sensenbrenner was the chief architect of landmark legislation that significantly expanded the rights of federal crime victims. This legislation would install reforms to prevent any recurrence of a plea agreement like the one made by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in South Florida which allowed Epstein to plead guilty to a lesser state court charge resulting in a lenient 13-month jail sentence for a single prostitution charge. However, the reality was that dozens of victims had been identified at that time, and the deal was withheld from them. “If federal prosecutors re-victimize innocent victims – as Epstein’s horrific plea deal did – they must be held accountable, in a timely fashion,” Wasserman Schultz said. “This legislation would give our justice system vital tools to prevent such gross miscarriages of injustice from being repeated. His victims deserve to know that no one will suffer the way they have again.” “This bipartisan bill strengthens our criminal justice system by ensuring that crime victims are not mistreated by bad-intentioned prosecutors,” Sensenbrenner said. “It also increases accountability and provides a better avenue for the Justice Department to identify and root out abuse and corruption.” The newly-filed Crime Victims’ Rights Act of 2020 (CVRA) would:
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