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NEWS
FBI's Rape News isn't good enough
WENews, 19 October 2009 By Sarah Tofte
WeNews commentator
Monday, October 19, 2009
Despite FBI stats showing rapes at a 20-year low, Sarah Tofte says some
hard facts are missing from this good news. The large number of untested
rape kits in cities like L.A. and Detroit indicate that many rape
survivors haven't received justice.
(WOMENSENEWS)--Two weeks ago, the FBI released annual crime statistics
showing that reported rapes were at a 20-year low.
In 2008, 89,000 people reported that they had been raped to the police,
compared with a high of 109,062 reported rapes in 1992. Experts on
sexual violence attributed the decline in part to the role of DNA
evidence in identifying suspects in stranger rape cases. The physical
evidence from a rape victim, known as a rape kit, has certainly helped
move some cases that might not have been solved in the past through the
system. But some hard facts are missing from the good news.
First, while reported rapes have gone down, according to comprehensive
academic studies the arrest rate for rape remains anemic at only 30
percent of reported cases, roughly the same as two decades ago. Second,
despite the potential benefits of testing these rape kits, tens of
thousands of them sit untested in police storage facilities throughout
the United States. It turns out the "good news" contained in the FBI's
report isn't good enough.
Rape victims expect that when they submit to the lengthy, invasive--and
sometimes traumatic--process of collecting DNA evidence from their
bodies, the information will be used to try to find and prosecute their
rapists.
Tested Kits, More Arrests
Testing a rape kit can identify an assailant, confirm a suspect's
contact with a victim, corroborate a victim's account of the crime,
connect apparently unrelated crimes and exonerate innocent suspects. In
2003, when New York City began to test every booked rape kit, the arrest
rate for rape skyrocketed, from 40 percent to 70 percent of reported
cases.
Thirty years of judicial and legal reforms have improved some aspects of
the criminal justice system's response to rape, but untested rape kits
in police storage facilities serve as the proverbial
canary-in-the-coal-mine, warning that all is not well. The number of
untested rape kits is a concrete indicator of how many rape victims have
not received the help they are owed with finding and prosecuting their
attackers.
While reported rapes may be at historic lows, these untested rape kits
represent rape victims who didn't see justice done.
A law enforcement decision to test a rape kit is an indication of a
commitment to build a strong investigation. National studies have shown
that cases in which a rape kit was collected, tested and found to
contain DNA evidence are more likely to move forward in the criminal
justice system. Conversely, untested rape kits typically represent lost
justice for rape victims, as it often means a rape investigation was cut
short before the offender could be brought to justice.
Over 10,000 Untested Kits
Recent research from Human Rights Watch, the organization where I work,
on the rape kit backlog in Los Angeles County revealed that law
enforcement agencies there do not routinely send every booked rape kit
for testing, nor do they keep track of how many kits remain untested. We
reported last March that the county had nearly 12,500 untested rape
kits.
This phenomenon isn't isolated to Los Angeles County. Recent news
reports revealed possibly 10,000 untested rape kits in Detroit police
storage facilities and 4,000 untested kits at the Houston Police
Department.
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