GENERAL LAWS OF MASSACHUSETTS
PART III.
COURTS, JUDICIAL OFFICERS, AND PROCEEDINGS IN CIVIL CASES
TITLE IV.
CERTAIN WRITS AND PROCEEDINGS IN SPECIAL CASES
CHAPTER 258B.
RIGHTS
OF VICTIMS AND WITNESSES OF CRIME
Chapter 258B: Section 3 Rights afforded victims, witnesses
or family members
Section 3. To provide victims a meaningful role in the
criminal justice system, victims and witnesses of crime, or
in the event the victim is deceased, the family members of
the victim, shall be afforded the following basic and
fundamental rights, to the greatest extent possible and
subject to appropriation and to available resources, with
priority for services to be provided to victims of crimes
against the person and crimes where physical injury to a
person results:
(a) for victims, to be informed by the prosecutor about
the victim's rights in the criminal process, including but
not limited to the rights provided under this chapter. At
the beginning of the criminal justice process, the
prosecutor shall provide an explanation to the victim of how
a case progresses through the criminal justice system, what
the victim's role is in the process, what the system may
expect from the victim, why the system requires this, and,
if the victim requests, the prosecutor shall periodically
apprise the victim of significant developments in the case;
(b) for victims and family members, to be present at all
court proceedings related to the offense committed against
the victim, unless the victim or family member is to testify
and the court determines that the person's testimony would
be materially affected by hearing other testimony at trial
and orders the person to be excluded from the courtroom
during certain other testimony;
(c) for victims and witnesses, to be notified by the
prosecutor, in a timely manner, when a court proceeding to
which they have been summoned will not go on as scheduled,
provided that such changes are known in advance. In order to
notify victims and witnesses, a form shall be provided to
them by the prosecutor for the purpose of maintaining a
current telephone number and address. The victim or witness
shall thereafter maintain with the prosecutor a current
telephone number and address;
(d) for victims and witnesses, to be provided with
information by the prosecutor as to the level of protection
available and to receive protection from the local law
enforcement agencies from harm and threats of harm arising
out of their cooperation with law enforcement and
prosecution efforts;
(e) for victims, to be informed by the prosecutor of
financial assistance and other social services available to
victims, including information relative to applying for such
assistance or services;
(f) for victims and witnesses, to a prompt disposition of
the case in which they are involved as a victim or a
witness;
(g) for victims, to confer with the prosecutor before the
commencement of the trial, before any hearing on motions by
the defense to obtain psychiatric or other confidential
records, and before the filing of a nolle prosequi or other
act by the commonwealth terminating the prosecution or
before the submission of the commonwealth's proposed
sentence recommendation to the court. The prosecutor shall
inform the court of the victim's position, if known,
regarding the prosecutor's sentence recommendation. The
right of the victim to confer with the prosecutor does not
include the authority to direct the prosecution of the case;
(h) for victims and witnesses, to be informed of the right
to request confidentiality in the criminal justice system.
Upon the court's approval of such request, no law
enforcement agency, prosecutor, defense counsel, or parole,
probation or corrections official may disclose or state in
open court, except among themselves, the residential
address, telephone number, or place of employment or school
of the victim, a victim's family member, or a witness,
except as otherwise ordered by the court. The court may
enter such other orders or conditions to maintain limited
disclosure of the information as it deems appropriate to
protect the privacy and safety of victims, victims' family
members and witnesses;
(i) for victims, family members and witnesses, to be
provided, subject to appropriation and to available
resources, by the prosecutor with a secure waiting area or
room which is separate from the waiting area of the
defendant or the defendant's family, friends, attorneys or
witnesses, during court proceedings. The court shall,
subject to appropriation and to available resources,
designate a waiting area at each courthouse and develop any
reasonable safeguards to minimize contact between victims
and the defendant, or the defendant's family, friends,
attorneys or witnesses;
(j) for victims and witnesses, to be informed by the court
and the prosecutor of procedures to be followed in order to
apply for and receive any witness fee to which they are
entitled;
(k) for victims and witnesses, to be provided, where
appropriate, with employer and creditor intercession
services by the prosecutor to seek employer cooperation in
minimizing employees' loss of pay and other benefits
resulting from their participation in the criminal justice
process, and to seek consideration from creditors if the
victim is unable, temporarily, to continue payments;
(l) for victims or witnesses who have received a subpoena
to testify, to be free from discharge or penalty or threat
of discharge or penalty by his employer by reason of his
attendance as a witness at a criminal proceeding. A victim
or witness who notifies his employer of his subpoena to
appear as a witness prior to his attendance, shall not on
account of his absence from employment by reason of such
witness service be subject to discharge or penalty by his
employer. Any employer or agent of said employer who
discharges or disciplines or continues to threaten to
discharge or discipline a victim or witness because that
victim or witness is subpoenaed to attend court for the
purpose of giving testimony may be subject to the sanctions
stated in section fourteen A of chapter two hundred and
sixty-eight;
(m) for victims and witnesses, to be informed of the right
to submit to or decline an interview by defense counsel or
anyone acting on the defendant's behalf, except when
responding to lawful process, and, if the victim or witness
decides to submit to an interview, the right to impose
reasonable conditions on the conduct of the interview;
(n) for victims, to confer with the probation officer
prior to the filing of the full presentence report. If the
victim is not available or declines to confer, the probation
officer shall record that information in the report. If the
probation officer is not able to confer with the victim or
the victim declines to confer, the probation officer shall
note in the full presentence report the reason why the
probation officer did not make contact with the victim;
(o) for victims, to request that restitution be an element
of the final disposition of a case and to obtain assistance
from the prosecutor in the documentation of the victim's
losses. If restitution is ordered as part of a case
disposition, the victim has the right to receive from the
probation department a copy of the schedule of restitution
payments and the name and telephone number of the probation
officer or other official who is responsible for supervising
the defendant's payments. If the offender seeks to modify
the restitution order, the offender's supervising probation
officer shall provide notice to the victim and the victim
shall have the right to be heard at any hearing relative to
the proposed modification.
(p) for victims, to be heard through an oral and written
victim impact statement at sentencing or the disposition of
the case against the defendant about the effects of the
crime on the victim and as to a recommended sentence,
pursuant to section four B of chapter two hundred and
seventy-nine, and to be heard at any other time deemed
appropriate by the court. The victim also has a right to
submit the victim impact statement to the parole board for
inclusion in its records regarding the perpetrator of the
crime;
(q) for victims, to be informed by the prosecutor of the
final disposition of the case, including, where applicable,
an explanation of the type of sentence imposed by the court
and a copy of the court order setting forth the conditions
of probation or other supervised or unsupervised release
within thirty days of establishing the conditions, with the
name and telephone number of the probation officer, if any,
assigned to the defendant;
(r) for victims, to have any personal property that was
stolen or taken for evidentiary purposes, except contraband,
property subject to evidentiary analysis, and property the
ownership of which is disputed, returned by the court, the
prosecutor or law enforcement agencies within ten days of
its taking or recovery if it is not needed for law
enforcement or prosecution purposes or as expeditiously as
possible when said property is no longer needed for law
enforcement or prosecution purposes;
(s) for victims, to be informed by the parole board of
information regarding the defendant's parole eligibility and
status in the criminal justice system;
(t) for victims, to be informed in advance by the
appropriate custodial authority whenever the defendant
receives a temporary, provisional or final release from
custody, whenever a defendant is moved from a secure
facility to a less-secure facility, and whenever the
defendant escapes from custody. The victim shall be informed
by the prosecutor about notification rights and the
certification process required to access the criminal
offender record information files. Persons requesting such
notice must provide the appropriate authority with current
information as to their address and telephone number;
(u) for victims, to be informed that the victim may have a
right to pursue a civil action for damages relating to the
crime, regardless of whether the court has ordered the
defendant to make restitution to the victim.
(v) for one family member of a victim of a homicide, which
the matter before the court is related, to possess in the
courtroom a photograph, that is not of itself of an
inflammatory nature, of the deceased victim that is not
larger than eight by ten inches; provided, however, that at
no time may the photograph be exposed or in anyway displayed
in the presence of any member of the jury, or the jury pool
from which a jury is to be selected in a particular matter;
provided, further, that nothing in this section shall
preclude the admission into evidence of a photograph that
the court deems relevant and material. |