Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

British Columbia

'Canadian criminal justice system is failing victims of crime,' says UBC prof.

A UBC law professor and expert in victim crime says the Canadian criminal justice system needs to take a hard look at the way it treats victims.

Victim crime expert says additional training needed for all levels of the justice system

A three-year study by a UBC law professor has found many victims of crime are reluctant to report it because they don't trust the system or are afraid of publicity. (Mike Laanela/CBC)

A UBC law professor is callingformandatory training in victim's rightsforall Canadianjudges, police and criminalprosecutors.

Prof.Benjamin Perrin'srecommendation is a key takeaway froma three-year study he conductedinto victims of crime.

He believes every single criminal justice participant, at all levels,needs to understandthe complicated issue of victim rights and currently the knowledge is lacking.

"You can have the best victim services team, the best police officers, the best Crown prosecutors ... But if just one of them drops the ball, the whole case falls apart," he said.

Perrin is the author ofVictim Law: The Law of Victims of Crime in Canadaand hesaidhis research has uncovered a trend of victims not reporting crimes to law enforcement.

Speaking with guest host Angela Sterritt on B.C. Almanac, Perrin said victims are often hesitant to report crime because they do not trust police in their community, they are afraid of publicity or they don't have faith in the criminal justice system.

His research includes a report from Statistics Canada that showedless than one-third of alleged offences are reported to police.

"When we look at the 2.2 million Canadians who suffer violent crime every year, it's overwhelmingly marginalized groups," said Perrin.

"Aboriginal Canadians, members of the LBGTQ community, young people, women ... Traditionally politically disenfranchised groups so their interests really have been given no notice," he said.

'An issue of trust'

Perrin said a reworking of the justice system needs to happen so victims feelconfident reporting crimes to law enforcement. This includes educatinglaw enforcement officials about the obligations they have to victims.

He said a huge issue is victims thinking justice will not be served, whether from casesbeing thrown out because of long delays or by questionable views such as the one that led to theresignation of Federal Court Justice Robin Camp.

Perrin cited cases from his research where proper forensic analysis hadnot been done because officers had lacked necessary knowledge surrounding rape kits. He also pointed to critical flaws in the way sexual assault trials are carried out.

Perrinsaid respecting the rights of an accused person is integral to the criminal justice process in Canada, but it can't be done in a way that excludes and alienates a victim.

With files from B.C. Almanac


To listen to the full interview, click on the audio labelled: UBC prof. calls for justice system reform