Over the past three decades, the criminal justice field has witnessed
an astounding proliferation of statutory enhancements benefiting
people who are most directly and intimately affected by crime. As
of 2000, all states had passed some form of legislation to benefit
victims. In addition, 32 states have recognized the supreme importance
of fundamental and express rights for crime victims by raising those
protections to the constitutional level.
Of course, the nature, scope, and enforcement of victims
rights vary from state to state, and it is a complex and often frustrating
matter for victims to determine what those rights mean for them.To
help victims, victim advocates, and victim service providers understand
the relevance of the myriad laws and constitutional guarantees,
the Office for Victims of Crime awarded funding to the National
Center for Victims of Crime to produce a series of bulletins addressing
salient legal issues affecting crime victims.
Ordering Restitution to the Crime Victim, the sixth in the
series, provides an overview of state laws addressing the rights
of victims to receive court-ordered restitution from offenders in
criminal cases.This bulletin and the others in the Legal Series
highlight various circumstances in which relevant laws are applied,
emphasizing their successful implementation.
We hope that victims, victim advocates, victim service providers,
criminal justice professionals, and policymakers in states across
the Nation will find the bulletins in this series helpful in making
sense of the criminal justice process and in identifying areas in
which rights could be strengthened or more clearly defined.We encourage
you to use these bulletins not simply as informational resources
but as tools to support victims in their involvement with the criminal
justice system.