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SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA RECORD

Saturday, November 2, 2024

ATTORNEY'S OFFICE FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA: U.S. Attorney Announces More than $1.5 Million in Grants to Assist Victims in Southern District of California

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U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of California issued the following announcement on Oct 6.

U.S. Attorney Robert Brewer announced $1,549,980 in Department of Justice grants to assist victims in the Southern District of California. The grants, awarded by the Department’s Office of Justice Programs, are part of almost $1.8 billion distributed to state victim assistance and compensation programs to fund thousands of local victim assistance programs across the country and to provide millions in compensation to victims of crime.

The Office for Victims of Crime, a component of the Department’s Office of Justice Programs, flagship formula grant program is supported by the Crime Victims Fund (the Fund), which was established under The Victims of Crime Act. The Fund supports a broad array of programs and services that focus on helping victims in the immediate aftermath of crime and continuing to support them as they rebuild their lives. In FY 2019 alone, VOCA grants served over seven million victims and paid more than $399 million in compensation claims.

“Advocates, service providers, and law enforcement agencies from around the country stand ready to help crime victims exercise their legal rights and reclaim their lives,” said Attorney General William P. Barr. “These new funding resources continue this administration’s unprecedented commitment to providing the support necessary for victims of crimes to be able to heal and recover.”

The awards made to organizations in the Southern District of California and around the country will support local direct victim service programs, including children’s advocacy centers, domestic violence shelters, rape crisis centers, human trafficking and elder abuse programs, civil legal services, crime victims’ rights enforcement, as well as victim assistance positions in prosecutors’ offices and law enforcement departments.

“Helping crime victims achieve justice and obtain support is our top concern, and these grants are an important part of that equation,” said U.S. Attorney Robert Brewer. “This money has the potential to change many lives for the better.”

In the Southern District of California, which includes San Diego and Imperial counties, grants were awarded to Rady Children’s Hospital San Diego, $1,250,000; and to Nile Sisters Development Initiative, which serves refugee and immigrant communities, $299,980.

State victim compensation programs will receive over $133 million to supplement the state funds that offset victims’ financial burdens resulting from crime. This compensation is often extremely vital to victims who face enormous financial setbacks from medical fees, lost income, dependent care, funeral expenses and other costs.

“The services made available by this funding represent a lifeline for tens of thousands of survivors each month, many of whom otherwise would have no place to turn in a moment of profound crisis,” said Katharine T. Sullivan, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the Office of Justice Programs. “These awards will help service providers, as well as law enforcement agencies and prosecutors’ offices respond to the many emotional and material challenges that crime victims in our country face every day.”

Original source can be found here.

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