The first such statement in the United States was presented in 1976 in
Fresno, California, and was passed as law in California in 1982, because of
Doris Tate's concern that any members of the
Manson family cult that killed her daughter,
Sharon Tate, in 1969 might obtain
parole. In 1982, the Final Report of the ''President's Task Force on Victims of Crime'' recommended that "judges allow for, and give appropriate weight to, input at sentencing from victims of violent crime." In 1992, the
United States Attorney General released 24 recommendations to strengthen the
criminal justice system's treatment of crime victims. The Attorney General endorsed the use of victim impact statements and stated that judges should "provide for hearing and considering the victims' perspective at sentencing and at any early release proceedings." In 1991, the
Supreme Court of the United States held that a victim impact statement in the form of testimony was allowed during the sentencing phase of a trial in
Payne v. Tennessee . It ruled that the admission of such statements did not violate the
Constitution and that the statements could be ruled as
admissible in
death penalty cases. All fifty states allow some sort of victim impact statement at sentencing. However, laws vary by state. For example, there are variations by what topics victims can cover, if they may be read or submitted as a written document, who can submit them, if a victim can be cross-examined after reading a statement, or if it is permissible to videotape the victim impact statement. ==United Kingdom==