1 / 18

Best Practices for Vulnerable Victim-Witnesses in Trafficking Prosecutions

Explore best practices for prosecuting trafficking cases involving vulnerable victim-witnesses, including strategies for obtaining strong victim-witness evidence and ensuring their protection.

tdubreuil
Download Presentation

Best Practices for Vulnerable Victim-Witnesses in Trafficking Prosecutions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. osce.org Office of the Special Representative and Co-ordinator on Combating Trafficking in Human Beings • Aimée Comrie, Adviser • 04 July 2011 Expert Seminar on the Prosecution of THB:Best Practices for Vulnerable Victim-Witnesses

  2. At the core of trafficking is exploitation Exploited persons tend to be vulnerable: • May be traumatized and susceptible to re-traumatization • Require particular attention and focus from investigator and prosecutor • May be reluctant to cooperate for various reasons • May be reluctant to discuss explicit details of their ordeal • May be challenged in providing linear narratives which can meet the burden of proof • Benefit from multidisciplinary human rights approach including psycho-social, medical, legal counselling • Benefit from joint investigation teams • Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet

  3. Modern Slavery: What does it look like? Subtle forms of coercion Equally pernicious Equally exploitative Harder to prove at trial than physical chains Need to identify factual indicators

  4. Need for witness evidence that tells the full story.

  5. How can we strengthen victim-witness evidence? • By relying less on victim-witness evidence, through strategic investigation planning which aims at a full array of corroborative evidence. • Better interview techniques – victim led and full, informed consent obtained throughout the process. • Using an array of victim and witness protection strategies even in resource-challenged states which cannot always afford relocation programs.

  6. What is a strategic investigation plan? Building a global view of the transaction into the collection: • Specialized unit, multidisciplinary team, gender perspective • Trained, neutral, sensitive, professional interpreters • Devoted crime analysis including crime pattern analysis • Network analysis, modes of liability, chain of command • Identify key partners for first contact • Use of covert assets or intermediaries if appropriate

  7. Aggressive evidence acquisition Eases the burden on victims and witnesses Forensic Documentary Material, Video, Photographic Expert, pattern and overview Financial Intercept Suspect, insider or collaborator

  8. Don’t forget Victims and witnesses in trafficking case are often overlooked as a source of vital linkage evidence. They often are privy to intimate knowledge of the planning and execution of crimes, of the means of communication and the key decision makers in an organized criminal group.

  9. Interviewing vulnerable victims and witnesses Selection of possible witnesses based on availability and profile Overcoming reluctance of the investigators Overcoming reluctance of the victim/witness to participate Overcoming reluctance to speak about certain acts

  10. Informed consent is the ethical responsibility of the investigator. Should include professional evaluation from psycho-social perspective on capacity to consent and should be re-evaluated throughout the interview. The inherent power dynamics, made worse in THB situations, should make you lose sleep at night – has this person really consented, do they really understand? Do they know the full extent of the risks and dangers they are submitting their families to?

  11. The Step-Wise Interview • Introduction • Build rapport • Free narrative • Open questioning • Specific questions (optional) • Forensic information (optional) • Conclusion

  12. You have to get to the hard stuff. Penetration (if sexual assault) Repeated episodes Dates, time, length of enslavement Multiple perpetrators

  13. Eliciting sexual acts Their words first But get to technical side Use of diagrams, tools Watch out for traumatization, do no harm! Do not use suggestive photos, your or their body, do not paraphrase

  14. Assessing credibility Credibility is assessed without reference to hard fast rules and yet it has to rely on more than a hunch.

  15. How to analyze witness evidence? Coherence Spontaneous reproduction Appropriate detail Contextual embedding Reproduction of conversation Unusual details, unexpected complications, peripheral details. Admitting lack of memory, knowledge Spontaneous corrections Expressing insecurities

  16. The paradox of repetition…

  17. Victim and Witness Protection • Need for full effective independent VWP schemes vs. reality • Best practices along the way in the absence of VWP: • Covert assets, partners • Confidentiality • Safe havens, empowerment • Initial response capacity • Communication • Ongoing victim care including psycho-social • Redacted identities vs. anonymous testimony

  18. osce.org

More Related