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Sexual Assault Crimes Training for Law Enforcement

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Sexual Assault Crimes Training for Law Enforcement Module 2: Interviewing Victims & Effective Report Writing * * * * Add that you can start by asking the victim to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sexual Assault Crimes Training for Law Enforcement


1
Sexual Assault Crimes Trainingfor Law Enforcement
  • Module 2
  • Interviewing Victims
  • Effective Report Writing

2
ACTIVITY
  • What Do You Already Know?

3
What You Will Learn
  • Considerations for working with sexual assault
    victims and witnesses in preliminary and follow
    up interviews
  • Barriers to effective interviewing
  • Report writing techniques that support the
    successful prosecution of cases

4
ACTIVITY
  • What is the single most important factor in
    determining success of interviews with sexual
    assault victims?
  • How long should you wait before holding the first
    interview?

5
Who is Present for the Interview?
  • Victim and Officer
  • Victim Advocate, if victim wishes
  • Ask victim privately about other support people
  • Do not include witnesses in interview with victim
    (even if they are supportive)

6
Conducting the Interview
  • Ask the victim where they would like to do
    interview
  • Reassure the victim its not their fault
  • Sit down if possible and try to respect the
    physical space a victim might want
  • Use smooth movements and a calm voice try to
    express patience, friendliness, and support

7
Ask Victim to Describe Experiences in Their Own
Words
  • Ask the victim to describe the assault, listing
    as many details and feelings as possible
  • Ask what the environment was like - what did they
    see/ hear/ feel/ smell/ taste?
  • Document what no looked like and when note
    all verbal AND non-verbal lack of consent
  • If a consensual encounter turned non-consensual,
    ask about how and when the perpetrator's behavior
    changed

8
Use Open-Ended Prompts
  • Try using the following questions to guide your
    conversation
  • And then what happened?
  • Tell me what you were thinking at that point.
  • Tell me what you were feeling when the offender
    did that.
  • What can you remember saying and doing?

9
Allow Information to Flow for the Victim
  • Always remember to do the following when working
    with a victim of sexual assault
  • LISTEN and dont interrupt
  • Ask for only what they can recall at the moment
  • Be comfortable with pauses
  • Avoid leading questions
  • Let the victim know they can ask for a break
  • Let the victim know its okay to say I dont
    know
  • Keep in mind that information gathered following
    experiencing a trauma may come out in spurts, be
    out of order, or be inaccurate
  • Keep in mind that you will be able to sort out an
    accurate timeline later

10
Common Responses to Trauma
  • Perceptual narrowing
  • Loss of cognitive and motor skills
  • Critical incident amnesia
  • Discomfort with discussing details
  • Inconsistencies in relaying information however,
    it does not mean its a false report

11
Allow Victim to Take the Lead
  • Allow the victim to focus on one topic until the
    mental picture becomes clear and the retrieved
    information complete
  • Silence allows the victim to collect their
    thoughts
  • Use natural pauses to ask questions and clarify
    Do I have that right?
  • Write down your own questions for the follow up
    interview

12
Additional Challenges for Victims
  • Possible illegal activity drug or underage
    alcohol use
  • Status in oppressed or underserved groups
  • Immigration status issues
  • Cultural issues can affect victim reactions

13
Working with Under-Served Populations
  • Show sensitivity
  • Keep in mind they have likely had a negative
    experience with a person in a position of power
    in the past
  • Be mindful about victims fears of working with
    law enforcement

14
Victim May Give You Information
  • Remember that experiencing trauma can affect
    memory. Victims might share information that is
  • Not consistent
  • Not true
  • Not complete
  • But that does NOT mean its a false report.

15
Purpose of Follow Up Interview
  • Gather additional information and clarify any
    questions not to go over the same material
    again

16
Arranging Follow Up Interview
  • Make sure victim has had adequate rest before the
    second interview
  • Ask where victim would like to conduct interview
    - where victim feels safe
  • Assist with transportation if needed
  • Contact a Victim Advocate if victim wishes (if
    this hasnt happened already)

17
Explain Process to the Victim
  • Explain that other people will be reading report
  • Remind victim it wasnt their fault
  • Explain that we need to clarify any
    inconsistencies so that other people who read the
    report will understand what happened
  • Explain why you are asking about specific details
    about sex acts or other issues - for example, to
    meet legal requirements to show a sexual assault
    occurred

18
Additional Items to Address
  • Let victim know its better if they disclose any
    illegal activity sooner helps their credibility
  • Address victim concerns about prosecution
  • Dont ask victim whether they want to participate
    in prosecution yet wait until end of
    investigation
  • Explain next steps in the process
  • Reassure that assault wasnt their fault

19
ACTIVITY
  • One Minute Review Fact Check

20
ACTIVITY
  • What are the barriers to effective interviewing
    of sexual assault victims?

21
Report Writing
  • Purpose is to support successful prosecution
  • Recreate reality of what happened from
    perspective of victim
  • Reminder Lack of consent is communicated
    through more than just words victims look away,
    close eyes, position or move their body as
    strategies to survive the assault

22
Document Victims Experience
  • Record what victim was thinking and feeling
  • Before
  • During
  • After the assault
  • Preserve any slang or street terms victim uses
    important not to clean up for the report (but
    be sure you and victim are communicating clearly)

23
Use Language of Non-Consensual Sex
  • Use words that describe parts of the body
  • Forced penis into vagina (instead of sexual
    intercourse
  • Forced tongue into vagina or penis into mouth
    (instead of oral sex)
  • Hand on victims breast (instead of fondle or
    caress)

24
Include in the Report
  • Grooming behavior by offender
  • Context of fear, force, threat, coercion and/or
    inability to consent by the victim
  • Victims experience of tonic immobility
  • Environment in which assault took place
    isolation, sound proofing
  • Evidence of verbal and/or physical resistance
    from the victim

25
More Elements to Include
  • Factors increasing victims vulnerability (youth,
    inexperience, subordinate position, immigration
    status)
  • Evidence of genital and/or non-genital injury
  • Changes in routine habits after assault (such as
    dramatic weight gain/loss)
  • Relevant electronic evidence text messages,
    Facebook posts, etc.

26
Documentation
  • Be sure to document ALL information from the
    victim, even if it doesnt cast them in a
    positive light
  • Look for ways to document the victims behaviors
    and state of mind before and after assault how
    did the victim change?
  • Find out who the victim told following the
    assault often called the outcry witness

27
ACTIVITY
  • One Sentence Summary on Report Writing

28
ACTIVITY
  • Review of Learning
  • Compare and contrast the knowledge and
    assumptions you had about investigations and
    report writing with what you know now.
  • Use the worksheet to write down some comparisons.

29
Checklists to Review on Your Own
  • What to SAY to a Victim During First Response
  • What to SAY to a Victim During the Follow Up
    Interview
  • What to GIVE a Victim
  • Forensic Exams - Victims and Suspects
  • Reminders for Report Writing for Sexual Assault
    Crimes

30
Special Thanks
  • Special thanks to Joanne Archambault, End
    Violence Against Women International (EVAWI).
    Foundational material in this module is based on
    concepts and information found in the Online
    Training Institute developed by EVAWI. For more
    information, please contact
  • Joanne Archambault, Executive Director
  • End Violence Against Women International (EVAWI)
  • http//www.evawintl.org/onlinetraining.aspx
  • This module was produced by Connecticut Sexual
    Assault Crisis Services, Inc. (CONNSACS) in
    collaboration with the Connecticut Police
    Officers Standards and Training Council
    (POSTC) and the Connecticut Police Chiefs
    Association (CPCA) through the support of
    subgrant No. 2009-WF-AX-0019 awarded by the state
    administrating office for the STOP Formula Grant
    Program.  The opinions, findings, conclusions,
    and recommendations expressed in this publication
    are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily
    reflect the views of the state or the U.S.
    Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against
    Women.
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