DAG Rosenstein Announces New Funding for Tribal Assistant
U.S. Attorneys and Support for Improving the Criminal Justice Response to
Sexual Assault, Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, and Stalking Program (ICJR)
as the “backbone of VAWA.”
In recognition of National Domestic Violence Awareness
Month, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein met with Acting Director of the
Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) Katharine Sullivan and other senior
Justice officials today to discuss the Violence Against Women Act’s (VAWA)
essential focus on criminal justice responses to domestic violence. Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein also
announced new OVW funding for the department’s Tribal Special Assistant U.S.
Attorney (SAUSA) program.
“There is no place in our society for domestic violence, and
holding perpetrators accountable and providing services to victims is a
critical part of the Department’s response,” said Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein.
“During this National Domestic Violence Awareness Month, I encourage law
enforcement, prosecutors, judges, and other criminal justice professionals to
speak out about domestic violence and redouble efforts to bring perpetrators to
justice. I am especially pleased to
announce new funding to support four new Tribal Special Assistant U.S.
Attorneys, whose collaboration across the tribal and federal jurisdictional
landscape is a model for effective prosecution of violence against women.”
OVW’s Tribal Special Assistant United States Attorneys
(Tribal SAUSAs) Program is another Department initiative supporting innovative
prosecutorial collaborations. These prosecutors bring cases in both tribal and
federal courts, and help ensure that tribal and federal authorities have a
seamless response in prosecuting cases under their jurisdiction. In OVW’s pilot
project, Tribal SAUSAs reported a wide range of successes, including
prosecution of cases that otherwise may not have been brought.
Today, OVW is announcing new Tribal SAUSA Program awards of
$437,500 each to the following four tribes:
Salt River
Pima-Maricopa Indian Community (Arizona);
Confederated
Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (Oregon);
Rosebud Sioux
Tribe (South Dakota); and
Confederated
Tribes of the Colville Reservation (Washington).
Commemorated in the United States since 1987, National
Domestic Violence Awareness Month educates the public, commemorates and honors
victims and survivors, and connects service providers across the country.
President Trump has continued the tradition of issuing a presidential
proclamation to recognize October as National Domestic Violence Awareness
Month.
Strengthening criminal justice is the core component of
VAWA, and Acting Director Sullivan pointed to the Improving the Criminal
Justice Response to Sexual Assault, Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, and
Stalking Program (ICJR) as the “backbone of VAWA.” ICJR helps communities
investigate and prosecute these crimes and keep violent criminals off the
street. Since 1997, OVW has made 1,655 ICJR grant awards totaling over
$847,000,000. In fiscal year 2018, OVW made 54 ICJR awards totaling
$32,610,116.
This funding has supported justice responses including
dedicated police and prosecution units, specialized courts, and offender
monitoring in 538 communities. For example, Fairfax County in Virginia uses
ICJR funding to support a specialized prosecutor for domestic violence and
stalking cases and to monitor the enforcement of civil protective orders.
ICJR also funds unique collaborative approaches, such as Family
Justice Centers – “one stop shops” housing police, prosecution, and victim
services in one place – and multidisciplinary teams that decrease domestic
violence homicides. Since 2012 OVW has awarded over $24 million in ICJR funding
to reduce domestic violence homicide, including pilot sites, nationwide
training, and research. This includes six awards totaling $3,299,977 for fiscal
year 2018.
Many victims also face substance abuse issues, and may
struggle to access the justice system and get the protection they need. OVW is
today announcing an award of $450,000 to the Alliance for HOPE International to
train Family Justice Centers to address this complex challenge. The Alliance
for HOPE International will partner with the National Center on Domestic Violence,
Trauma, and Mental Health.
VAWA was first authorized in 1994 and focused on
strengthening the criminal justice response to domestic violence. VAWA was
reauthorized in 2000, 2005, and 2013, and each reauthorization included
expansions such as addressing elder abuse, combatting stalking, and serving
victims of sex trafficking in Indian Country. More information about VAWA is
available at www.justice.gov/ovw/legislation.
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