As far as I know that is exactly what is being proposed. I have a high opinion of the Minister for Justice, he is a barrister and has shown a good level of reasoned compassion in the past and I think this is the sort of thing that he is looking at from a legislative perspective; that the victim impact statement is heard in camera and the judge has the power to rule that some or all of it cannot be reported. I think this is a fair solution.Instead of trying to censor a victims statement, why not allow a victim to have their full say but do it in camera so it doesn't become a matter of public record. Surely the only people that need to hear the victim impact statement is the sentencing judge and the accused. It sounds like in this case, the mother felt like her son was not getting the justice he deserved and she wanted to make the court aware of her feelings. Our legal system should be humane enough to allow for this while also protecting whatever rights the convicted person has.
The old maxim that hard cases make bad laws holds true here. What is the mother of one of the two men who were shot dead in the attempted post office raid named the police man that shot her son? What if she, through her sons contacts, found out where he and his family lived. If a court found that the police officer in question had acted improperly, thus conferring the badge of victim on her son, would it be Ok for her it offer all of that information in open court without the judge having recourse to restrict the reporting of those facts? Ah, but that's different! Yes, but the next time it might not be quite so different, and the next time and the next. That's the issue here, not the grief of mother.