The Sensible Sentencing Trust is a political
advocacy group
Advocacy groups, also known as interest groups, special interest groups, lobbying groups or pressure groups use various forms of advocacy in order to influence public opinion and ultimately policy. They play an important role in the developm ...
based in
Napier, New Zealand
Napier ( ; mi, Ahuriri) is a city on the eastern coast of the North Island of New Zealand and the seat of the Hawke's Bay Region, Hawke's Bay region. It is a beachside city with a Napier Port, seaport, known for its sunny climate, esplanade lin ...
. The Trust's stated goal is "to educate both the public and victims of serious violent and/or sexual crime and homicide" It focuses on advocating for the rights of victims and tougher penalties against offenders.
Goals and issues
The Sensible Sentencing Trust' stated purpose sole purpose is "to educate both the public and victims of serious violent and/or sexual crime and homicide." Key goals include educating victims of their rights and entitlements, educating the public about the light of victims, and supporting victims of crime through education, trauma support, accessing protection, and providing social rehabilitation.
The Trust has campaigned for several goals including:
*tightening criteria for name suppression
*adding burglary to the schedule of "three strikes" offenses
*imposing mandatory maximum sentences on unprovoked attacks
*introducing a "degrees of murder" sentencing regime including a "life means life" provision for first degree murder
*replacing the "Not Guilty By Reason of Insanity" (NGBRI) verdict with one of "Proven, but insane"
*amending the definition of "reckless murder" in the
Crimes Act 1961 to include kicking and stomping the victim's head
*introducing the offense of
home invasion
A home invasion, also called a hot prowl burglary, is a sub-type of burglary (or in some jurisdictions, a separately defined crime) in which an offender unlawfully enters into a building residence while the occupants are inside. The overarching ...
to the Crime Act 1961
*establishing a Victims Commissioner
*abolishing
parole
*introducing cumulative sentencing
*compensating jurors based on their income rate
*tightening the criteria for
restorative justice.
Organisational structure
The Sensible Sentencing Trust consists of two separate trusts.
#The Sensible Sentencing Trust (SST) which advocates on behalf of victims of serious violent and/or sexual crime and homicide in New Zealand. SST is a registered charitable trust which does not have donee status with the
Inland Revenue Department (IRD).
#The Sensible Sentencing Group Trust (SSGT) which serves to educate the public as to the plight of victims and to ensure such victims and their families are fully aware of their rights and entitlements, providing both education and practical support during their time of trauma. SSGT is a registered charitable trust which has donee status with the Inland Revenue Department.
History
Formation
The Sensible Sentencing Trust was formed by
Garth McVicar
Garth Neil McVicar (born ) is a New Zealand political lobbyist who founded the Sensible Sentencing Trust (SST) law-and-order advocacy group in 2001. In August 2014, he stood down from SST to focus on a campaign for election to Parliament. McVica ...
in 2001 in response to the prosecution and trial of Mark Middleton for threatening to kill Paul Dally who tortured, raped, and killed Middleton's 13-year-old stepdaughter Karla Cardno in 1989. Due to public sympathy for Middleton over Dally's crimes, Judge Michael Lance sentenced Middleton to nine months' jail suspended for two years. McVicar supported Middleton during his trial.
Following Middleton's prosecution and trial, McVicar and 30 supporters established the Sensible Sentencing Trust to advocate for tougher sentencing for violent offenders including life imprisonment. Membership quickly grew to 135,000 by 2002. In addition, the Trust attracted 3,000 donors and chapters were established across New Zealand. In addition, the Trust established a youth division.
By 2009, McVicar claimed that the Trust had over 150,000 members including between 15 and 20 Members of Parliament including former
ACT MPs
David Garrett and
Stephen Franks
Stephen Franks (born 1950) in Wellington, New Zealand is a commercial lawyer. At one time, he was chairman and Partner of the large firm Chapman Tripp. Franks has been a member of two political parties. He previously served as a List MP for th ...
.
Notable Trust members have included Stephen Couch and Rita Coskery. Couch was the sister of Susan Couch, a survivor of a 2001 triple homicide at the
Panmure Returned and Services' Association (RSA) club perpetrated by
William Dwane Bell
William Dwane Bell (born 1978) is a New Zealand triple murderer. He committed a triple murder on 8 December 2001 at the Panmure RSA, after they fired him. He committed the murders while out on parole for a previous aggravated robbery in which h ...
. Couch as a Trust Member has advocated the reintroduction of
capital punishment and
three strikes legislation. Coskery was the mother of Auckland pizza delivery driver Michael Choy, who was assaulted and murdered by several youths including
Bailey Junior Kurariki
Bailey Junior Kurariki (born May 15, 1989) was convicted of the manslaughter of pizza delivery man Michael Choy in Papakura, Auckland, New Zealand on the 12th of September 2001. He was 12 years and 252 days old the day Choy was killed, making him ...
.
Campaigns
The Sensible Sentencing Trust has claimed credit for pushing several changes in the New Zealand justice system favouring victims including:
*lobbying for the
Sentencing Parole and Reform Bill 2001
In law, a sentence is the punishment for a crime ordered by a trial court after conviction in a criminal procedure, normally at the conclusion of a trial. A sentence may consist of imprisonment, a fine, or other sanctions. Sentences for multipl ...
, which increased the sentence for murder from 10 to 17 years.
*bail reforms in 2007 which increased the minimum non parole period for violent, sexual and drug offenders.
*placing victims' rights on the political radar
*lobbying for the Prisoner and Victims' Claims Bill to prevent criminals from profiting from their crimes in 2004.
*a $50 Offender Levy in 2009
*supported the
Sentencing and Parole Reform Act 2010
The Sentencing and Parole Reform Act 2010, now repealed, was an Act of Parliament in New Zealand that denied parole to repeat violent offenders, and imposed maximum terms of imprisonment on repeat offenders who commit three serious violent offence ...
, which provided for progressively increased sentencing for repeat offenders within a category of 40 listed violent and sexual offences.
*securing compensation for Panmure RSA survivor Sue Crouch from the
Department of Corrections.
*the introduction of Bail Amendment and Victims of Crime Reform legislation.
*lobbying for the retention of the Sentencing and Parole Reform Act 2010 including commissioning a public opinion poll.
*launching a campaign to stop recidivist impaired drivers.
*sponsoring a petition in May 2021 calling for tougher legislation against
"coward punch" attacks following the death of mixed martial artist Fau Vake.
Loss of charitable status and reorganisation
In 2010, the Trust's tax-free charitable status was revoked by the
Charities Commission, on the grounds that it had become a political lobby group rather than a charity. In response, McVicar accused the Charities Commission of "muzzling organisations like us that are rocking the boat a little bit". To comply with the Charities Commission's requirements, McVicar announced that the Trust would split into two separate organisations: a charity advocating for victims of crime called the Sensible Sentencing Group Trust and a separate non-charitable political arm that would lobby for harsher criminal penalties called the Sensible Sentencing Trust.
Election activities
The Trust was a registered electoral promoter at the
2011 general election.
The Trust did not register as a promoter for the
2014 general election, but founder McVicar contended the electorate and the party list as a member of the
Conservative Party.
Former trust member Ruth Money criticised McVicar's decision to align the Trust with a political party due to revelations that former Conservative leader
Colin Craig had sexually harassed former secretary Rachel MacGregor. Money had advocated for MacGregor and opined that McVicar's decision was the "beginning of the end" of his leadership.
Online offenders' database
In early 2002, the Trust established an online offender database in response to the New Zealand Government's refusal to undertake this task, in spite of repeated requests to do so.
In mid-January 2014, the Trust launched a new website and updated offender database. The SST claimed that the Trust would protect the public and help keep offenders accountable for their crimes. McVicar also announced that the organisation would publish two databases; one for Serious Violent Offenders and one for Paedophiles and Sexual Offenders. At its launch, the updated database contained over 5,000 criminal records with information on release conditions, previous convictions, and a Database Sentencing Tracker for viewing the sentence length of offenders.
Following a privacy breach in 2014, the Trust agreed to provide training to volunteers, but only one person was trained and they left shortly after.
In December 2018, the
Privacy Commissioner John Edwards chastised the Trust for wrongfully misidentifying a man as a pedophile on its online database for almost two years. He stated that the Trust had a "continuously negligent, cavalier, and dangerous approach to privacy." In response to criticism by the Privacy Commissioner, McVicar admitted that the organisation "absolutely cocked up and deserved to be publicly identified." He also confirmed that the Trust would correct the inaccurate information on its database. However, he criticised Edwards for making an issue of identifying the Trust while not calling for the names of recidivist violent offenders to be placed in a publicly accessible database.
New leadership, 2018–present
In December 2018, McVicar stepped down as leader of the Sensible Sentencing Trust and was succeeded by his youngest daughter Jess McVicar, who became the organisation's National Spokesperson.
In January 2021, former
New Zealand First
New Zealand First ( mi, Aotearoa Tuatahi), commonly abbreviated to NZ First, is a nationalist and populist political party in New Zealand. The party formed in July 1993 following the resignation on 19 March 1993 of its leader and founder, Winst ...
Member of Parliament
Darroch Ball became the co-leader of the Sensible Sentencing Trust alongside Jess McVicar. As co-leader leader, Ball criticised the
Green Party Co-Leader and minister
Marama Davidson for attending a function hosted by the
Mongrel Mob
The Mongrel Mob (sometimes self-labelled as the Mighty Mongrel Mob or colloquially known as the Mob) is an organised street gang and Prison gang based in New Zealand. With a network of more than thirty chapters throughout the country and additi ...
gang.
References
{{Reflist
External links
Sensible Sentencing Trust
Crime in New Zealand
Political advocacy groups in New Zealand
2001 establishments in New Zealand