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Alice Vachss

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Alice Vachss

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Alice Vachss What a fun question! I know most people don't think of him as a romance writer -- for good reason -- but I actually think my husband, Andrew Vachss, w…moreWhat a fun question! I know most people don't think of him as a romance writer -- for good reason -- but I actually think my husband, Andrew Vachss, writes the most compelling love stories. My favorite evolves over the course of the Burke series between The Mole and Michelle. My favorite moment: when Michelle tries to explain feeling trapped in her body and the Mole responds, "I understand trapped."(less)
Alice Vachss You can't prosecute difficult cases effectively unless you are an investigator at heart. So in some sense, every case starts out a mystery. The ones t…moreYou can't prosecute difficult cases effectively unless you are an investigator at heart. So in some sense, every case starts out a mystery. The ones that haunt me start with chronic, evil predators whose known crimes are just the tip of the iceberg. Finding the unknown crimes, and then being able to do something about them ... that's an ongoing plot, where lives are literally at stake.(less)
Average rating: 4.24 · 242 ratings · 38 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
Sex Crimes: Ten Years on th...

4.18 avg rating — 155 ratings — published 1993 — 9 editions
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Sex Crimes: Then and Now: M...

4.30 avg rating — 66 ratings3 editions
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OBaaT

4.52 avg rating — 21 ratings2 editions
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Sex Crimes.

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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“How the jury responds to a victim is an enormous percentage of the verdict in any sex crimes trial–which is why prosecutors want Good Victims.

In New York City, Good Victims have jobs (like stockbroker or accountant) or impeccable status (like a policeman’s wife); are well educated and articulate, and are, above all, presentable to a jury; attractive–but not too attractive, demure–but not pushovers. They should be upset–but in good taste–not so upset that they become hysterical. And they must have 100 percent trust and faith in the prosecutor, so that whatever the ADA decides to do with the case is fine with them. The criteria for a Good Victim varies with locale. In the Bible Belt, for example, the profile would be a “Christian Woman.” But the general principle remains the same.

Such attitudes are not only distasteful, they are also frightening. They say that it’s O.K. to rape some people–just not us. Old-time convicts spell justice “just us”–prosecutors aren’t supposed to. Sex-crimes prosecutors are supposed to understand that the only way to keep the wolf from our own door isn’t to throw him fresh meat but to stop him the first time he darkens anybody’s door.”
Alice Vachss, Sex Crimes: Then and Now: My Years on the Front Lines Prosecuting Rapists and Confronting Their Collaborators

“The victims I’ve worked with taught me that individuals want to believe they are entitled to justice. My community taught me that when the choice is clear-cut enough, so do entire counties.

We have become profoundly discouraged about whether we have such choices. My own experience is that we do, if we are willing to pay the price. We need better data to make decisions based on performance, but getting that data is a matter of passing the right laws requiring crunchable statistics and mandatory public reports. The rest is on us. If Tip O’Neil was right, if all politics is local, then our local district attorneys are the place to start. Crime is local. What we do about it is as close as the nearest voting booth.”
Alice Vachss, Sex Crimes: Then and Now: My Years on the Front Lines Prosecuting Rapists and Confronting Their Collaborators

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“How the jury responds to a victim is an enormous percentage of the verdict in any sex crimes trial–which is why prosecutors want Good Victims.

In New York City, Good Victims have jobs (like stockbroker or accountant) or impeccable status (like a policeman’s wife); are well educated and articulate, and are, above all, presentable to a jury; attractive–but not too attractive, demure–but not pushovers. They should be upset–but in good taste–not so upset that they become hysterical. And they must have 100 percent trust and faith in the prosecutor, so that whatever the ADA decides to do with the case is fine with them. The criteria for a Good Victim varies with locale. In the Bible Belt, for example, the profile would be a “Christian Woman.” But the general principle remains the same.

Such attitudes are not only distasteful, they are also frightening. They say that it’s O.K. to rape some people–just not us. Old-time convicts spell justice “just us”–prosecutors aren’t supposed to. Sex-crimes prosecutors are supposed to understand that the only way to keep the wolf from our own door isn’t to throw him fresh meat but to stop him the first time he darkens anybody’s door.”
Alice Vachss, Sex Crimes: Then and Now: My Years on the Front Lines Prosecuting Rapists and Confronting Their Collaborators

“The victims I’ve worked with taught me that individuals want to believe they are entitled to justice. My community taught me that when the choice is clear-cut enough, so do entire counties.

We have become profoundly discouraged about whether we have such choices. My own experience is that we do, if we are willing to pay the price. We need better data to make decisions based on performance, but getting that data is a matter of passing the right laws requiring crunchable statistics and mandatory public reports. The rest is on us. If Tip O’Neil was right, if all politics is local, then our local district attorneys are the place to start. Crime is local. What we do about it is as close as the nearest voting booth.”
Alice Vachss, Sex Crimes: Then and Now: My Years on the Front Lines Prosecuting Rapists and Confronting Their Collaborators

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