NCJ Number: 187772
Title: Evaluation of Efforts to Implement No-Drop Policies:
Two Central Values in Conflict, Final Report
Author: Barbara E. Smith ; Robert Davis ; Laura B. Nickles
; Heather J. Davies
Corporate Author: Criminal Justice Section American Bar
Assoc
740 15th Street, NW
Washington, DC, 20005-1009
Sponsor: National Institute of Justice US Dept of Justice
810 Seventh Street NW
Washington, DC 20531
Sale: Paper Reproduction Sales National Institute of Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000 Department F
Rockville, MD 20849
Criminal Justice Section American Bar Assoc
740 15th Street, NW
Washington, DC, 20005-1009
Date Published: 03/2001
Page Count: 91
Country of Origin: United States
Language: English
Grant Number: 98-WT-VX-0029
Annotation: Research conducted in Omaha, NE, Everett, WA,
Klamath Falls, OR, and San Diego, CA, sought to determine if prosecution
of perpetrators of domestic assault without the victim's consent
was feasible with appropriate increases in resources.
Abstract: The study chose the three sites due to their receipt
of funds from the Office of Justice Program for no-drop prosecution
under the Violence against Women Office grant program to encourage
arrest policies. These sites' grant proposals seemed the clearest
about implementing a strong no-drop policy. The research added San
Diego to the sites because it was the first place to try no-drop
and is regarded as successful. Study information came from interviews
with criminal justice officials, onsite observations, a review of
written policies, analysis of case samples, and victim interviews.
Results revealed that no-drop is more a philosophy than a strict
policy of prosecuting domestic violence cases. None of the prosecutors
pursued every case they filed. Results also revealed that establishing
a no-drop policy can increase convictions significantly. Findings
also indicated that implementing no-drop requires significant case
screening up front and that a successful no-drop policy requires
judges who accept the idea of admitting hearsay or excited utterances
from victims and statements from defendants, ordocumentation of
prior bad acts. Findings also revealed that no-drop is expensive.
Finally, the interview data suggested that victims may regard prosecution
as beneficial, even if they did not want any action beyond arrest.
Figures, tables, and 15 references
Thesaurus Term: Court procedures ; Prosecutorial discretion
; Prosecution ; Domestic assault ; Prosecutor-victim interaction
; CJ response to victims ; Victim reactions to CJS ; Domestic assault
arrest policies ; Nebraska ; Oregon ; Washington ; California
The NIJ Research Review: NCJ Number 187772
|