“Plea bargaining is the black box of criminal justice decision-making.
It is hidden from the public but also from the parties most immediately
effected by a crime and its consequences—victims who suddenly
see what happened to them reduced to a shadow of the reality they experienced.
Victims find the disconnect between their lived experience and
the process disconcerting and worse, “I feel like a fringe dweller”. In this
important study of victims reactions to plea bargaining, Freiberg and
Flynn expertly prize open the plea bargaining box for victims by asking
them about their experiences, including their views of potential policy
interventions. As one victim sums up—justice must not only be done,
and seen to be done, but also ‘felt to be done’. Criminal justice systems
worldwide have allowed efficiency to become their super paradigm. This
book is a timely reminder for practitioners, policy makers and students
of criminal justice about the importance of recognizing that victims are
the proxy for the communities they serve and protect. Freiberg and Flynn
clearly articulate why a plea bargain is not just ‘a deal’—it’s a human story
to be respected.”