The National Center for Victims of Crime’s vision emerged from one family’s tragedy: in 1985, Ala Isham and Alexander Auersperg established the National Center for Victims of Crime, originally the Sunny Von Bulow National Victim Advocacy
Center. Motivated by their mother’s victimization and their family’s traumatic experience with the criminal justice system, our founders believed it was fundamentally wrong that crime victims were often shut out of and “revictimized”
by the very system that was supposed to help them. They wanted to redefine what justice for crime victims means by giving them a voice in the criminal justice system.

Since those early days, the National Center for Victims of Crime has become the nation’s leading resource and advocacy organization for victims of all types of crime and for the people who serve them. We have played a critical role
in shaping the national discussion on the impact of crime and what victims need in order to recover.

We have enabled more people — elected officials, policy makers, business leaders, law enforcement officers, judges, media representatives, educators, healthcare providers — to understand that justice for victims involves more than
holding offenders accountable for their crimes. It involves providing victims full participation in the criminal justice process and the means to overcome the physical, emotional, and financial consequences of crime. At the National
Center for Victims of Crime, we call this concept parallel justice. Simple fairness.

 

1985

National Center Created

The National Center was formed at the end of 1985 in Fort Worth, Texas and was incorporated with
the IRS in March of 1986.

1992

Infolink

A national toll-free information line, launched and offered access to over 5,000 victim assistance programs nationwide, as well 64 resource packages, mailed free of charge.

Growing

The coalition grew from 3,000 in 1986 to 8,000 local
victim service organizations in all 50 states and at the federal level by 1992.

1993

Violence Against Women Act

The Violence Against Women Act passes. This landmark legislation was supported by research from the National Center and was the first step in establishing protections for victims and survivors.

1999

Bar Association Created

NCVC forms the National Crime Victim Bar
Association to promote civil justice for victims of crime.

2000

Stalking Resource Center

The Stalking Resource Center formed in partnership
with the Office on Violence Against Women, which trained over 100,000 professionals.

2004

NCVC Releases Compensation Report

NCVC releases Repairing the Harm: A New Vision for Crime Victim Compensation in America, which examines compensation data from all 50 states, the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, and compensation programs in other countries. The report also recommends a framework for strengthening victim compensation in the United States

2012

National Compassion Fund Created

The National Compassion Fund is created to equitably and transparently distribute funds to survivors and communities affected by mass violence tragedies.

2015

VictimConnect

VictimConnect is created as a national helpline in
2015 and provides confidential and trauma informed support and referrals nationwide, to all crime types, regardless of crime type or legal severity.

D.C Victim Hotline

D.C Victim Hotline is created to provide local support to survivors and victims in the D.C. area. It is now the sole entry point for D.C. youth and adult survivors of sexual assault.

2025

NCVC Celebrates 40 Years


For VictimConnect, call or text 855-484-2846. If this is an emergency, please call 911.

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