National Center for Victims of Crime’s media guides
The glare of media is sometimes unavoidable for victims and survivors of crime. Whether it’s breaking news coverage of violence, inquiries for interviews for “crime trend” stories, or investigative “true crime” stories told years later, it’s clear that nothing is truly off limits for journalists and content creators. Some of them do mean well, and occasionally, victims and their advocates can harness media to create a positive impact.
Yet, too often, the results of media coverage — be it news stories, podcasts, or documentaries — wind up retraumatizing survivors and victims’ loved ones instead of helping them. Victims are not characters in stories who exist to boost ratings; they’re people in various stages of trauma and healing journeys.
Below, you’ll find two guides created by the National Center for Victims of Crime — one designed to help content creators (journalists, podcasters, and documentarians) do their work ethically and in ways that minimize harm and the other to help survivors and victim advocates navigate media coverage..
About these guides: In 2023 and 2024, the National Center for Victims of Crime created these two guides with the input of NCVC staff, crime survivors and advocates who have experience dealing with media coverage, and responsible journalists.
NCVC originally created a guide for crime victims and media in the 1990s. Our team felt new guides were needed to reflect the modern era of social media and society’s fascination with “true crime” content. We hope that victims and their advocates, first and foremost, find these guides (complete with tip sheets) informative and helpful when facing media pressure. And just as important, we hope journalists and content creators can learn from these documents and implement practices that reduce harm and involve victims in their work. We believe this type of collaborative storytelling will create better — and more responsible — products.
We will update these documents as needed because the media landscape is always changing.
Please feel free to reach out to [email protected] with any questions.