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The Federal Crime Victim’s Fund – Not Just For Victims Anymore

Jan 25, 2017
by Caroline Miller
budget pork barreling, David Dayen, The Forgotten Victims, Victim's Crime Fund
2 Comments

Courtesy of google.com

In my final years of public service, I’d become somewhat adept at finding places in our county budget where administrators could hide money. I don’t blame them. Managers long for stability and politician’s hunger to create new programs for which they can take bows. Even so, when a fellow commissioner sought money for a worthy agenda, I could sometimes find an untapped reserve.  To the novice, I may have seemed a wizard.  I wasn’t. Experience had taught me where to look. “Materials and Service” could hide a pirate’s treasure.  Projections for the purchase of equipment and supplies are always squishy figures. “ Personnel” can cloak a number of positions never intended to be filled.   “Building and Maintenance” can squirrel away multi-year construction projects, some of which never get started..

A gavotte between government management and its political arm is common everywhere, I suspect. Case in point is the often proclaimed collapse of Social Security.  If elected officials hadn’t dipped into that well so often, the account might actually show a surplus. 

Recently, political big spenders have shown an interest in the federal government’s Victims’ Crime Fund, money set aside to help those whose lives have been shattered by criminal violence.  Fines from conviction pour into the Justice Department every year and are meant to be passed along to the states. In 2009 the fund had $3 billion dollars on account, but by 2014, it had risen to $12 billion.  The balance would be higher if the Justice Department had levied criminal rather than civil charges against convicted offenders from Wall Street and the big banks.   Not doing so, says writer David Dayen, “short-change[d] victims of vicious crimes.” (“The Forgotten Victims,” by David Dayen, New Republic, December 2016, pg. 11)  

Pockets of money that already exist and don’t require new taxes or new laws to spend them are a temptation to legislators.  Last year Congress raided $1.5 billion from the victims’ fund for pork barrel projects in their districts.  Legislators intend to spend another $375 million in the near future. (Ibid pg. 11.)   Politicians on both sides of the aisle don’t seem able to discipline themselves, which is why managers play their budget games. 

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2 Comments
  1. Christine January 25, 2017 at 9:31 am Reply
    While listening to questions posed by senators to the nominees of the new administration, and more specifically, the nominee for the director of the Budget committee, I marveled at how knowledgeable and intelligent everyone sounded. But then, I reminded myself that every single one of these individuals, including the nominee, are part of the problems they're defining and defending and I was left wondering how they can continue saying all they do while maintaining straight faces. Over and over again questions posed to the nominee remained unanswered and answers given often seemed unacceptable to the senators yet, nominees are approved. At some point someone or something has to become accountable to the truth and do what's right. If they've dipped into Social Security funds, they need to begin replacing those funds. How will trillions of dollars of spending be cut without affecting every single citizen? How to generate more income and find untapped, unnecessary and unused funds to pay for existing and new programs. Is it too late to ask you to run for the Senate, Caroline?
    • Caroline Miller January 25, 2017 at 9:54 am Reply
      Sensible comments, all. You see clearly the difference between the sanity of Main street and what passes for sanity in Washington. The only mad thing you've suggested is that I run for the Senate. Thanks, but am not senile enough to consider it.

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Contact Caroline at

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Portland, Oregon author Caroline Miller had distinguished careers as an educator, union president, elected official and artist/advocate.

Her play, Woman on the Scarlet Beast, was performed at the Post5 Theatre, Portland, OR, January/February 2015

Caroline published a serialized novelette, Marie Eau-Claire, on the website, The Colored Lens.  She also published the story Gustav Pavel,  a parable about ordinary lives, choice and alternate potential, on the website Fixional.co.

Caroline has published four novels

  • Ballet Noir
  • Trompe l’Oeil
  • Gothic Spring
  • Heart Land

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