Victim and Witness Notification Program.
The Department of Corrections (DOC) is required to send written notice to certain persons regarding the parole, release, community custody, work release placement, furlough, or escape of a specific person convicted of a violent offense, a sex offense, a domestic violence court order violation, or a felony Harassment offense. Except in the event of escape or emergency furloughs, the notice must be sent at the earliest possible date and no later than 30 days before release.
The persons to whom the notice must be sent include:
If a person convicted of a violent offense, sex offense, domestic violence court order violation, or of felony Harassment escapes from a correctional facility, the DOC must immediately notify the chief of police of the city and sheriff of the county in which the person resided immediately before the person's arrest and conviction. If previously requested, the DOC must also notify the witnesses and the victim of the crime for which the person was convicted. If the person is recaptured, the DOC must send the required notice as soon as possible but no later than two working days after the DOC learns of the recapture.
The Public Records Act.
The Public Records Act (PRA) requires state and local agencies to make their written records available to the public for inspection and copying upon request, unless the information is exempt from disclosure in the PRA or as otherwise provided in law. The PRA is liberally construed, and its exemptions interpreted narrowly.
The Jail Booking and Reporting and Victim Information and Notification Systems.
The Jail Booking and Reporting System (JBRS) is an electronic central repository and information source for statewide city and county jail booking information. The JBRS contains descriptive information of each person booked into jail, such as the person's name, vital statistics, address, and mugshot, along with date and time of any release or transfer and other information. The JBRS is capable of communicating electronically with every Washington city and county jail and with all other Washington criminal justice agencies.
A component of the JBRS system is the statewide automated Victim Information and Notification (VINE) System. The VINE system automatically notifies a registered victim when various changes occur such as when an incarcerated person transfers to another facility, is discharged, changes custody or supervision levels, escapes, becomes noncompliant in certain instances, or has an upcoming court date.
In addition to current notification requirements, the DOC is required to send written notice to specified persons regarding the parole, release, community custody, work release placement, furlough, or escape of incarcerated persons convicted of the following additional crimes:
Information and records prepared, owned, used, or retained by the Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs (WASPC) revealing the existence of a notification, or of registration to be notified, regarding any specific individual, or the identity of or any information submitted by a person who registers to be notified of a person's custody or supervision status, upcoming hearing, case disposition, or service of a protection order pursuant to the JBRS or VINE systems, or any other program used for such notification purposes, are exempt from public inspection and copying under the PRA.
(In support) The expansion of victim notification programs is a good thing, as victims should be informed and included. Adding an amendment to create a PRA exemption for the victim notification program is essential. That program has been in place for 15 years under assumption that it is exempt from the PRA, and it is not. As a result, people who access that program could have their information made public. The exemption is limited to information a person gives to WASPC so that they can receive notification and information associated with a notification having been provided. This exemption will prevent incarcerated persons from asking if anyone has registered for notification about them. The importance of this exemption cannot be overstated. Sexual assault victims come forward at considerable personal cost. The very least that can be done is to provide protection for them.
(Opposed) There is no problem with victims of domestic violence, Controlled Substances Homicide, or Unlawful Imprisonment being notified of the convicted person's release. Likewise, there is no problem with protecting the identities of people asking for notification. However, it is a problem to notify law enforcement when people with low level offenses enter communities. It puts an aura around a person that they cannot get away from, as their information will be in law enforcement databases and visible every time an officer comes into contact with that person. This can affect their interactions with law enforcement. Assault in the third degree is based on the victim’s employment or based on negligence, not intentional action, and is often an Assault in the fourth degree that because of some additional factor qualifies as a felony offense. Often these cases involve people who do not know one another and will never see each other again. Victim notification is less worrisome, but amendments should be made to limit the vast expansion of law enforcement notification.