HRCODEPINK
Verified Insider
Just wondering....
To all you sleuthers that have been doing this longer than me...
Does offering a reward like this ever work? I mean, is it really an incentive for someone that already knows what happened and haven't spoken out yet?
TIA!
:tyou:
Not only do people get rewards for information, but there are people who work cases, like we do, for nothing more than the hopes of getting a reward.
You don't often hear about reward money being handed out for a couple of reasons. First, in some states, it is illegal to release the names of paid informants, for their safety. Another issue is that people may look at the evidence or testimony of someone who received a reward and give it less weight than should be given because they were paid for the information. Another thing, like in the case of the DC Snipers, the two people who were given the reward were not paid for 2 years after they had helped because sometimes many people try to claim the reward and it takes time to decide which tips were actually worth the money. There are many factors involved and there are often times when a reward is given and we never hear about it at all. Lots of people won't turn anyone in even if there is a reward if they are afraid of the repercussions and this would probably be even more the case if every time someone got a large reward they had them at a press conference with a huge check like they do when people win the lottery. If I had information on a crime and was due a reward, I would want to remain anonymous. When you call Crime Line in my state, you are allowed to give as much information as you want about who you are and they assign you a number which they attach to your information and that becomes your identity until they decide who is getting the check.
http://articles.latimes.com/2004/mar/20/nation/na-reward20
ETA:
"For instance, the Austin, Texas crime stoppers program boasts that it has paid out close to $1 million in rewards since 1979. And the federal Rewards for Justice program (funded by federal tax dollars and private donations ) has paid over $80 million to tipsters who've help capture terrorist suspects.
And remember the Unibomber? His brother and sister-in-law collected the $1 million reward for his capture and conviction. It shows how the will to do what's right can overcome even family ties."
http://criminal.lawyers.com/Criminal-Law-Basics/Does-Offering-Rewards-To-Solve-Crimes-Pay-Off.html
And even if the rewards do not work in cases like this, no one has lost anything except the time it took to go on TV and offer the reward itself. If no one comes forward, no one gets paid.