Prosecutors’ perceptions of the utility of video-evidence for adult complainants of sexual assault


Autoria(s): Westera, Nina J.; Powell, Martine B.
Data(s)

01/01/2015

Resumo

Playing an adult sexual complainant’s video-recorded police interview as the basis for his or her evidence-in-chief is a reform Australia could adopt to help improve criminal justice responses to these cases. This article presents a qualitative evaluation of prosecutor’s support for this reform and their views about what conditions would determine its utility. Focus groups were held with 13 prosecutors from across New Zealand (which already has this reform) and Australia. Collectively, prosecutors supported the availability of video-evidence for adult complainants. They perceived the utility of this reform depends on the following conditions: (1) the quality of the police interview; (2) how credibly the complainant presents on video; (3) contextual factors that influence the complainant’s ability to give live evidence; and (4) the degree of stakeholder support. These findings suggest that Australia should extend video-evidence to adult complainants of sexual assault guided by careful planning aroundthese four areas.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30077449

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Thomson Reuters

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30077449/powell-prosecutorsperceptions-2015.pdf

http://www.westlaw.com.au/maf/wlau/app/document?&src=search&docguid=I62d44d42464011e5b664a25c9d4f5872&epos=1&snippets=true&fcwh=true&startChunk=1&endChunk=1&nstid=std-anz-highlight&nsds=AUNZ_JOURNALS&isTocNav=true&tocDs=AUNZ_AU_JOURNALS_TOC&context=13&extLink=false&searchFromLinkHome=true#nhit-90

Direitos

2015, Thomson Reuters

Palavras-Chave #rape #sexual assault #prosecution #video-evidence
Tipo

Journal Article