Victim's Rights Project https://victimsrightsnm.org/ Protecting and Enforcing Victim's Rights Tue, 29 Oct 2024 17:55:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://victimsrightsnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/cropped-Victims-Rights-Project-Logo-Without-Text-32x32.png Victim's Rights Project https://victimsrightsnm.org/ 32 32 Making Victims Rights Meaningful: Advocating for Victims in Criminal Courts https://victimsrightsnm.org/new-mexico-cle-victims-rights-2/ Tue, 29 Oct 2024 17:55:11 +0000 https://victimsrightsnm.org/?p=3941 Date: November 22, 2024 Time: 9:00 to 11:15 a.m. In-Person Location: 6739 Academy Rd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109 (Conference Room in the Garden Level) Virtual: Zoom link will be sent once registered Fee: $90.00 Course Title: Making Victim’s Rights Meaningful: Advocating for Victims in Criminal Courts Provided by: DWI Resource Center/NM Victim’s Rights Project Faculty: Carolyn Callaway, Victim’s Rights Attorney […]

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The New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project will be providing a Continuing Legal Education (CLE) course for New Mexico attorneys. For more information email us at info@victimsrightsnm.org.

The upcoming class will be on November 22, 2024. This course covers New Mexico Constitutional and Statutory Rights of crime victims in the criminal justice system and includes current New Mexico appellate cases.


Date: November 22, 2024

Time: 9:00 to 11:15 a.m.

In-Person Location: 6739 Academy Rd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109

(Conference Room in the Garden Level)

Virtual: Zoom link will be sent once registered

Fee: $90.00


Course Title: Making Victim’s Rights Meaningful: Advocating for Victims in Criminal Courts

Provided by: DWI Resource Center/NM Victim’s Rights Project

Faculty: Carolyn Callaway, Victim’s Rights Attorney

Dathan Weems, Weems Hazen Law

Linda Atkinson, Executive Director, NM Victim’s Rights Project


This course will be for 1.5 General and .5 Ethics CLE’s

Course ID: 231363_25807

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New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project Newsletter August – September 2024 Edition https://victimsrightsnm.org/new-mexico-victims-rights-project-newsletter-august-september-2024-edition/ Fri, 13 Sep 2024 14:28:34 +0000 https://victimsrightsnm.org/?p=3925 The post New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project Newsletter August – September 2024 Edition appeared first on Victim's Rights Project.

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August – Sept. 2024 EditionDownload

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New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project Newsletter June – July 2024 Edition https://victimsrightsnm.org/new-mexico-victims-rights-project-newsletter/ Wed, 26 Jun 2024 17:19:33 +0000 https://victimsrightsnm.org/?p=3851 The post New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project Newsletter June – July 2024 Edition appeared first on Victim's Rights Project.

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June-July-Edition-1Download

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New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project Newsletter April – May 2024 Edition https://victimsrightsnm.org/new-mexico-vitctims-rights-project-newsletter/ Mon, 22 Apr 2024 19:53:28 +0000 https://victimsrightsnm.org/?p=3794 The New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project newsletter aims to keep the community informed about the latest news, resources, and developments in protecting and enforcing victim’s rights. Click here to view or download the newsletter.

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The New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project newsletter aims to keep the community informed about the latest news, resources, and developments in protecting and enforcing victim’s rights.

Click here to view or download the newsletter.

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Making Victims Rights Meaningful: Representing Victims in Criminal Courts https://victimsrightsnm.org/new-mexico-cle-victims-rights/ Wed, 20 Mar 2024 02:25:00 +0000 https://victimsrightsnm.org/?p=3662 Date: April 12, 2024   Time: 9:00 to 11:15 a.m.   Location for In person: 6739 Academy Rd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109   Virtual:    Zoom link will be sent once registered   Fee: $75.00 Course Title: Making Victim’s Rights Meaningful: Representing Victims in Criminal Courts Course Provided by: DWI Resource Center/NM Victim’s Rights Project Faculty: Carolyn […]

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The New Mexico Victim’s Rights Project will be providing a Continuing Legal Education (CLE) course for New Mexico attorneys. For more information email us at info@victimsrightsnm.org. We plan to provide this course on a regular basis, and the next course will be on April 12, 2024. This course will cover New Mexico Constitutional and Statutory Rights of crime victims in the criminal justice system.


Date: April 12, 2024

  Time: 9:00 to 11:15 a.m.

  Location for In person: 6739 Academy Rd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109

  Virtual:    Zoom link will be sent once registered

  Fee: $75.00


Course Title: Making Victim’s Rights Meaningful: Representing Victims in Criminal Courts

Course Provided by: DWI Resource Center/NM Victim’s Rights Project

Faculty: Carolyn Callaway, Victim’s Rights Attorney

               Linda Atkinson, Executive Director, NM Victim’s Rights Project


This course will be for 1.5 General and .5 Ethics CLE’s

Course ID: 224652_17103

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‘We stand with the victims’: The Navajo Nation has a sweeping new victim’s rights law https://victimsrightsnm.org/we-stand-with-the-victims-the-navajo-nation-has-a-sweeping-new-victims-rights-law/ Tue, 28 Nov 2023 20:01:39 +0000 https://victimsrightsnm.org/?p=3692 The post ‘We stand with the victims’: The Navajo Nation has a sweeping new victim’s rights law appeared first on Victim's Rights Project.

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Law Enforcement Statutory Requirements https://victimsrightsnm.org/law-enforcement-statutory-requirements-for-new-mexico-victims/ Tue, 29 Aug 2023 01:59:27 +0000 https://victimsrightsnm.org/?p=2768 31-26-8. Procedures for providing victims with preliminary information; law enforcement agencies.The law enforcement agency that investigates a criminal offense shall:A. inform the victim of medical services and crisis intervention services available to victims;B. provide the victim with the police report number for the criminal offense and a copy of the followingstatement: “If within thirty days […]

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31-26-8. Procedures for providing victims with preliminary information; law enforcement agencies.
The law enforcement agency that investigates a criminal offense shall:
A. inform the victim of medical services and crisis intervention services available to victims;
B. provide the victim with the police report number for the criminal offense and a copy of the following
statement: “If within thirty days you are not notified of an arrest in your case, you may call (telephone
number for the law enforcement agency) to obtain information on the status of your case.”; and
C. provide the victim with the name of the district attorney for the judicial district in which the criminal
offense was committed and the address and telephone number for that district attorney’s office.

History: Laws 1994, ch. 144, §8.

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The Case For Child Testimony Reform by Eliza https://victimsrightsnm.org/new-mexico-child-testimony-reform/ Wed, 05 Oct 2016 11:09:14 +0000 https://wpthemes.themehunk.com/featured/?p=181 I am the mother of two children who at ages 4 and 7 had to testify in front of their father at his trial. He was convicted of raping my daughter and sentenced to 36 years imprisonment. I am sharing our story with you in hopes that you will understand why New Mexico needs Child […]

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I am the mother of two children who at ages 4 and 7 had to testify in front of their father at his trial. He was convicted of raping my daughter and sentenced to 36 years imprisonment.

I am sharing our story with you in hopes that you will understand why New Mexico needs Child Testimony Reform.

It was my son’s 5th birthday when my daughter, then age 2 ½ disclosed to me that her father was touching her private parts. Though I grappled with how to wrap my head around what she had disclosed, I listened to her. I believed her. I took action. I reported it to the police.

At the Safe House exam and interview, the nurse told me the kids would have to testify and our lives would be turned upside down.

In my conversations with prosecutors and law enforcement, they told me that between 75-90 % of child sexual abuse cases fall apart and can’t be prosecuted because the young victims are too traumatized to testify in open court.

I am the mother of two children who at ages 4 and 7 had to testify in front of their father at his trial. He was convicted of raping my daughter and sentenced to 36 years imprisonment.

I am sharing our story with you in hopes that you will understand why New Mexico needs Child Testimony Reform.

It was my son’s 5th birthday when my daughter, then age 2 ½ disclosed to me that her father was touching her private parts. Though I grappled with how to wrap my head around what she had disclosed, I listened to her. I believed her. I took action. I reported it to the police.

Our quest for justice was long and sometimes discouraging. When the case was turned over to the District Attorney’s Office, I was told many times that “charges are coming,” but then I waited, and waited.

Meanwhile, my ex-husband (and children’s father) was stalking us. He possessed guns and made no secret of his plans to kill me and kidnap the children.

After a year of inaction by the District Attorney’s Office, I felt I needed to petition the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office to plead with them to take my daughter’s case. They agreed to prosecute him however, they made it clear that both children would be expected to testify in open court.

In New Mexico a child victim of sexual abuse is expected to walk into a room full of strangers, sit in the witness chair, swear to tell the truth, and set aside that this was their father whom they loved and yet had hurt them and threatened their lives if they told anyone.

I had naively assumed that the justice system was like I had seen on “Law & Order,” where the child would testify either through a closed circuit TV or in the Judge’s chambers. Prosecutors told me that if the kids couldn’t testify, there would be no case. I didn’t feel like I had a choice. Our safety and our lives were in danger.

There was no way for me to know the full impact of what I was committing them to do.

My son, who is now 8 years-old wants to change the law to help other kids not have to go through the same hell he and his sister withstood.

We are working with NM legislators to introduce Child Testimony Reform and asking our Supreme Court to change the rules that would allow protections for these young victims.

The child welfare index isn’t just a number, it’s a symbol of how a state values and treats its children. New Mexico does not rate well on the child welfare index. Let the way child victims are treated by the New Mexico criminal justices system be a strong indicator that New Mexico must improve how it protects child victim witnesses.

The brutal and sad truth is, this is how many perpetrators are able to silence their victims, because they know they will not be able to testify, and the abuse continues.

New Mexico needs to provide protections to the most vulnerable victims of in our criminal justice system. New Mexico can do better. New Mexico must do better. Support Child Testimony Reform.

Please email me at Latkinson@victimsrightsnm.org if you would like to support this legislation.

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When Child Testimony Creates Trauma In New Mexico https://victimsrightsnm.org/when-child-testimony-creates-trauma-in-new-mexico/ Wed, 05 Oct 2016 11:06:21 +0000 https://wpthemes.themehunk.com/featured/?p=178 A New Mexico women and her children are still wrestling with the psychological effects of a state judicial process that often requires sexually abused children to testify against their accuser in open court — even if the culprit is a parent. And she’s determined to change that for future crime victims. Read the entire story […]

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A New Mexico women and her children are still wrestling with the psychological effects of a state judicial process that often requires sexually abused children to testify against their accuser in open court — even if the culprit is a parent. And she’s determined to change that for future crime victims.

Read the entire story in The Santa Fe New Mexican.

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“I Survived A Violent Crime” – Then The Justice System Let Me Down https://victimsrightsnm.org/survivor/ Wed, 05 Oct 2016 11:00:13 +0000 https://wpthemes.themehunk.com/featured/?p=175 Strong advocates for victims of violent crime are needed now more than ever to ensure victims are treated with courtesy, dignity and respect and are not railroaded and simply “processed” through an uncaring, overworked and sometimes hostile criminal justice system. Read the entire story as it originally appeared on THE MARSHALL PROJECT

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Strong advocates for victims of violent crime are needed now more than ever to ensure victims are treated with courtesy, dignity and respect and are not railroaded and simply “processed” through an uncaring, overworked and sometimes hostile criminal justice system. Read the entire story as it originally appeared on THE MARSHALL PROJECT

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