2014] CRIME VICTIMS’ RIGHTS 81 For purposes of this Article, it is appropriate to focus on the last two of these three rights: the right to confer and the nght to fair treatment. The first of these three rights—the right to be reasonably protected—is already clearly extended by another statute to crime victims before the filing of charges. While OLC does not acknowledge this fact, the VRRA extends the first right to crime victims, directing that a “responsible official shall arrange for a victim to receive reasonable protection from a suspected offender and persons acting in concert with or at the behest of the suspected offender.”'*! Because a “suspected” offender obviously exists before the filing of criminal charges, the VRRA envisions the right to protection being provided as soon as is practical after a victim suffers from the commission of a crime. Additionally, the sections of the Attorney General Guidelines for Victim and Witness Assistance addressing the VRRA direct that Justice Department components must provide reasonable protection even before the filing of criminal charges.'*? So, under the VRRA, the Justice Department should already be providing reasonable protection for a victim before an offender is indicted, regardless of how the CVRA is interpreted.!”* The VRRA, however, does not contain a right to confer and a right to fair treatment and respect for the victim’s dignity. Therefore, if victims are going to receive these statutory rights before trial, these rights must be found in the CVRA. With regard to the CVRA provision that victims have the “reasonable right to confer with the attorney for the Government in the case,”!*4 OLC contends that “[t]he phrase ‘in the case’ implies the pendency of a judicial proceeding.”'*? To bolster its conclusion, OLC then cites Black’s Law Dictionary, which includes among its several definitions of the word “case” the definition “a civil or criminal proceeding.”'*° But OLC does not acknowledge that Black’s Law Di