VICTIM
EMPATHY TRAINING
In January,
2001, Bucks
County prison
officials
approached
Network of
Victim
Assistance
(NOVA) to
provide Victim
Empathy
Trainings (VET)
to offenders of
crime serving
state sentences
in the Bucks
County prison
system. Under
Act 143, certain
offenders of
violent crime
cannot be
released from
prison until
they have
completed
training on the
impact of crime
on victims and
the community.
The Bucks County
prison decided
that rather than
train and
utilize their
own staff for
this program,
they would
contract with
their local
comprehensive
victim advocacy
and service
organization to
develop and
conduct the
training
sessions. After
all, they felt,
who would be
better to
understand the
impact of crime
than those who
work with
victims?
Without a
doubt, this
venture
presented some
interesting
challenges for
the agency.
Staff members
had to deal with
their own
feelings of
trepidation
about meeting
with offenders
in the prison
setting. The
agency had to
address conflict
of interest
issues and
prepare
information and
assurances about
the program for
victims.
Confidentiality
of victim
information was
an absolute
requirement and
thus a clear
division between
education and
direct services
staff needed to
be maintained
for this
program.
NOVA staff
worked with the
Office of the
Victim Advocate
(OVA) to adapt a
curriculum
developed for
the state
correctional
facilities on
this topic.
Staff met with
prison officials
to clarify their
needs and
expectations and
address issues
of security,
logistics and
fees. NOVA
invited the
local MADD
chapter to work
with the agency
to deliver a
session on DUI.
To date, NOVA
has provided six
12-hour training
programs to over
70 inmates. The
training has
challenged the
staff’s
understanding of
offenders,
increased their
knowledge of the
prison system
and provided
them with more
thoughtful
answers to
victim’s
questions about
the prison
experience.
However, has the
program helped
offenders
develop empathy
and an
understanding of
the impact of
their crime on
their victim(s)
and the
community? Those
questions are
nearly
impossible to
answer. The
trainers do
believe that
they are
reaching many
participants in
some way.
As one
offender wrote
in the course
evaluation:
"Since taking
the training
course, I have
learned how the
victims feel and
what they go
through. I’ve
learned that
it’s more than
fear and it
isn’t just the
victim – the
family and
friends of the
victim also
suffer."
NOVA would
challenge other
victim service
providers to
consider working
with their local
prisons on
impact of crime
classes. For
more information
about NOVA’s
program, call
Kathy Bennett at
215-343-6543.