<\body> Stories in America: Rapists in the Ranks

Saturday, April 05, 2008

Rapists in the Ranks

I'm sure this is at the top of the DOD's list. Don't worry, girls. Your government will protect you. After all, you are a member of the military:
The stories are shocking in their simplicity and brutality: A female military recruit is pinned down at knifepoint and raped repeatedly in her own barracks. Her attackers hid their faces but she identified them by their uniforms; they were her fellow soldiers. During a routine gynecological exam, a female soldier is attacked and raped by her military physician. Yet another young soldier, still adapting to life in a war zone, is raped by her commanding officer. Afraid for her standing in her unit, she feels she has nowhere to turn.

Numbers reported by the Department of Defense show a sickening pattern. In 2006, 2,947 sexual assaults were reported -- 73% more than in 2004. The DOD's newest report, released this month, indicates that 2,688 reports were made in 2007, but a recent shift from calendar-year reporting to fiscal-year reporting makes comparisons with data from previous years much more difficult.

At the heart of this crisis is an apparent inability or unwillingness to prosecute rapists in the ranks. According to DOD statistics, only 181 out of 2,212 subjects investigated for sexual assault in 2007, including 1,259 reports of rape, were referred to courts-martial, the equivalent of a criminal prosecution in the military. Another 218 were handled via nonpunitive administrative action or discharge, and 201 subjects were disciplined through "nonjudicial punishment," which means they may have been confined to quarters, assigned extra duty or received a similar slap on the wrist. In nearly half of the cases investigated, the chain of command took no action; more than a third of the time, that was because of "insufficient evidence."

1 Comments:

At 4/07/2008 10:42 PM, Blogger JACK BOO said...

"I'm sure this is at the top of the DOD's list. Don't worry, girls. Your government will protect you. After all, you are a member of the military"

Oh? You mean like the government, or your local police, protect you as a citizen of the United States from rape? Last I checked government officials in the State of California actually forbids women from carrying concealed weapons so they might protect themselves.

"Don't worry girls." indeed.

 

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