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OVERCOMING WITNESS INTIMIDATION

Learn how to recognize and address witness intimidation, improve courthouse security, and protect witnesses using innovative tools and techniques. This resource provides practical strategies for prosecutors to create a consistent approach and work with communities.

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OVERCOMING WITNESS INTIMIDATION

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  1. OVERCOMING WITNESS INTIMIDATION INNOVATIVE PROSECUTOR TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES | May 17, 2018 Kristine Hamann Executive Director Prosecutors’ Center for Excellence John Delaney First Assistant District Attorney (ret.) Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office

  2. OBJECTIVES • Recognize witness intimidation • Work with your communities • Improve courthouse and courtroom security • Use all tools to protect your witnesses • Create a consistent office-wide approach 1

  3. WHAT IS WITNESS INTIMIDATION? 2

  4. Facebook 3

  5. Redacted PolicePaperwork • Witness 4

  6. CONTINUUM OF CONSEQUENCES • Refuses to speak with police • Refuses to appear in court • Complies with subpoena but refuses to testify • Testifies and claims loss of memory • Testifies and recants earlier statement • Testifies falsely • Injured or killed 5

  7. WHY? • DISTRUST of law enforcement: personal or general • FEAR • Neighborhood climate • Indirectly threatened • Directly threatened • Injured • ALLIANCE with perpetrator: personal, familial, group, neighborhood 6

  8. PULL EVERY LEVER • Community relationships • Witness “Protection” • Victim/witness advocates • Grand Jury • Legal Strategies • Vigorous investigation and vertical prosecution of intimidation • Judicial action 7

  9. ESTABLISH AND MAINTAIN COMMUNITY RELATIONSHIPS • DA staff participation in community events • Community Zones • Community Action Centers • Community participation in sentencing • Meet with groups about cooperation • Partner with community-based agencies

  10. 9

  11. INITIAL MEETING 10

  12. WITNESS-ORIENTED APPROACH • Assign an advocate as early as possible • Provide social services (DV model) • Provide counseling (post traumatic stress) • Emergency cell phone • Constant contact • Engagement by prosecutor 11

  13. WITNESS-ORIENTED APPROACH • Get all contact information • Get all means of communication • “next best friend” • Do a risk assessment • Do a safety plan • Identify ”danger zones” • Discuss limiting use of social media 12

  14. 13

  15. VIGOROUS EARLY INVESTIGATION • Jail/Prison • Calls • Visitor logs • Cell searches • Phone records • Informants • Surveillance • Social media 14

  16. VIGOROUS PROSECUTION • Specially assigned prosecutor/vertical prosecution • Bring witness intimidation charges – whenever possible, consolidate with main case • Use of the grand jury • Secrecy • No defendant • Delayed discovery 15

  17. ARREST TO ARRAIGNMENT 16

  18. ARRAIGNMENT • Do not use name of witness • Initials • “person whose identity is known to the affiant” • Redact: affidavit for arrest warrant, search warrant, charging document • High bail • Order of protection/condition of bail 17

  19. DISCOVERY 18

  20. REDACTION AND DELAYED DISCLOSURE • Redaction: • All witness identifiers • Search warrant affidavit • Police paperwork • Photographs and videos (body worn cameras) • Delay discovery • Judicial order to limit defendant’s access to discovery 19

  21. DEFENSE DISCOVERY 20

  22. DEFENSE DISCOVERY 21

  23. HEARINGS AND TRIAL 22

  24. EQUIPPING JUDGES WITH APPLICABLE LAW • Pennsylvania Bench Book • 2007 - Forum on witness intimidation • 2009 - Bench Book suggested • 2011 - Bench Book published • 2013 - Second Edition published • 2018 – Third Edition to be published 23

  25. 24

  26. COURTHOUSE AND COURTROOM SECURITY 25

  27. COURTHOUSE AND COURTROOM SECURITY • Prepare courthouse staff • Courthouse announcements • Screening at courtroom door • Safe waiting areas • Separating constituencies • Law enforcement in courtroom • Press – make sure they don’t reveal identity of a witness 26

  28. PREVENTING TRANSMISSION FROM OR RECORDING IN COURTROOM • Ban possession or use in courthouse and courtroom • Courtroom announcement: use without judicial permission will result in confiscation and contempt 27

  29. DISABLE USE IN COURTROOM 28

  30. WITNESS PREPARATION • Getting into and out of the courthouse/courtroom • Safety outside the courtroom • Stay out of “danger zone” • Check social media • Need for relocation • For trial • Forever 29

  31. MOTIONS IN LIMINE • Evidence: • Prior acts of intimidation • Forfeiture by wrongdoing • Admissibility of witness’s fear of testifying • Anonymous witness • Controlling the courtroom • Closing Courtroom 30

  32. COURTROOM CLOSUREWaller v Georgia, 467 US 39 (1984) • Party seeking closure must advance overriding interest that is likely to be prejudiced • Closure must be no broader than necessary • Trial court must consider reasonable alternatives • Must make factual findings, on the record, adequate to support the closure 31

  33. RELOCATION • Use an investigator for this • Who qualifies and when? • Have pre-existing protocols • Temporary relocation • Permanent relocation • Moving expenses and assistance • Rental costs • Storage • Related issues: family court, child protective services, school • Don’t over-promise and under-deliver 32

  34. COORDINATED APPROACH • Legal expert • Assign an investigator • Train legal and support staff • Track witness intimidation • Design of office • Partner with the courts, police, hospitals, social services 33

  35. HOW TO PAY FOR THIS? • Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) funding • Sole sourced by federal criminal fines, forfeitures and assessments • Purposes: 34 U.S.C. Sec. 20101 et seq. • Expenditures increased significantly • FY14: $635,000,000 • FY17: $2,573,000,000 • National Association of VOCA Assistance Administrators (NAVAA) • http://www.navaa.org/budget/index.html#background • http://www.navaa.org/statedirectory.html 34

  36. SUMMARY • Anticipate and recognize witness intimidation • Build relationships with communities • Partner with everyone who can help • Use every available tool • Be victim and witness centered 35

  37. National Resource and Technical Assistance Center for Improving Law Enforcement Investigations (NRTAC) centerforimprovinginvestigations.org | crimegunintelcenters.org Webinar Speakers: John Delaney, First Assistant DA (ret.), Philadelphia DA’s Office Kristine Hamann, Executive Director, Prosecutors’ Center for Excellence

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