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How are we doing on victim contact?

The national target for an offer of face-to-face contact with a victim of serious crime is 85% where the offender is sent to prison for more than 12 months and less than four years, and 85% where the offender gets four years or more.



Thames Valley Probation Area consistently exceeds this national target.


Site highlights
Who is a victim?
Direct victims of crime
Others including parents, carers, partners (heterosexual, lesbian and gay), children, dependents and others with a close personal relationship to the victim(s)

Victim Liaison Unit

Work with victims
The Thames Valley Victim Liaison Unit provides a service for victims and their families involved in serious crime.

It was established in 2001 in response to the Victim's Charter, to give victims information about the offender's progress through the prison system.

Officers attend Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements (MAPPA) meetings when appropriate. The officer is able to pass on vital information about the feelings and views of the victim, risk issues and case details.

In the majority of cases, the information that victims can give cannot be provided by other agencies and so the unit
has an extremely important role.

As well as being important for specific victims, MAPPPS are also used by the Victim Liaison Unit
to address general public protection issues.

Details passed on by victims can be used to understand how an offender 'operates' and hopefully prevent further offences from being committed.

Who does the probation service contact?
Staff have a responsibility to contact victims or victims' families where the offender received a prison sentence of 12 months or more for a violent or sexual offence. This includes cases where a life sentence has been passed.

How does it work?
Staff obtain feedback from the victim about any concerns they have about their perpetrator's proposed release. A written report, containing the victim's views, is submitted to the Parole Board by probation staff when the board is considering an offender for release.

Probation staff who work with victims do NOT have any involvement with the offender.

The Victim's Charter published by the Home Office explains the rights of people who are victims of crime. The Victim's Charter is available on the Home Office website:
www.homeoffice.gov.uk/documents/victims-charter

Victim Support logoVictim Support
For details of the nearest Victim Support and Witness Service scheme

Tel: 0845 30 30 900

Or visit
www.victimsupport.org.uk

For further information about Thames Valley's work with victims please ring the Victim Liaison Unit on 0118 955 1255 .

NPS logo
For further information about the National Probation Service for England and Wales visit
www.probation.homeoffice.gov.uk

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