Wike
2024-10-14 02:28:23 UTC
Why We Let Prison Rape Go On
ORANGE, Conn. ITS been called Americas most open secret:
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, around 80,000 women and
men a year are sexually abused in American correctional facilities. That
number is almost certainly subject to underreporting, through shame or a
victims fear of retaliation. Overall, only 35 percent of rapes and
sexual assaults were reported to the police in 2010, and the rate of
reporting in prisons is undoubtedly lower still.
To tackle the problem, Congress passed the Prison Rape Elimination Act,
signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2003. The way to eliminate
sexual assault, lawmakers determined, was to make Department of Justice
funding for correctional facilities conditional on states adoption of
zero-tolerance policies toward sexual abuse of inmates.
Inmates would be screened to identify possible predators and victims.
Prison procedures would ensure investigation of complaints by outside law
enforcement. Correctional officers would be instructed about behavior
that constitutes sexual abuse. And abusers, whether inmates or guards,
would be punished effectively.
But only two states New Hampshire and New Jersey have fully complied
with the act. Forty-seven states and territories have promised that they
will do so. Using Justice Department data, the American Civil Liberties
Union estimated that from 2003 to 2012, when the laws standards were
finalized, nearly two million inmates were sexually assaulted.
Six Republican governors have neglected or refused to comply, complaining
of cost and other factors. Rick Perry, then the governor of Texas, wrote
to the Justice Department last year stating that 40 percent of the
correctional officers in male facilities in Texas were women, so that
cross-gender viewing (like witnessing inmates in the shower, which
contravenes the legal guidelines) could not be avoided. The mandated
measures, he said, would levy an unacceptable cost on Texas, which has
one of the highest rates of prison sexual assault.
For its noncompliance, Texas is likely to lose just 5 percent of federal
funding for its state prisons, or about $800,000. It will still receive
$15.2 million in federal grants even as inmates continue to be sexually
assaulted. If Congress passes an amendment that Senator John Cornyn,
Republican of Texas, proposed last year, the financial penalty for
noncompliance will be removed altogether.
Ultimately, prisons protect rape culture to protect themselves. According
to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, about half of prison sexual assault
complaints in 2011 were filed against staff. (These reports werent all
claims of forcible rape; it is considered statutory sexual assault for a
guard to have sexual contact with an inmate.)
Image
Credit...Ben Jones
I was an inmate for six years in Connecticut after being convicted of
identity fraud, among other charges. From what I saw, the same small
group of guards preyed on inmates again and again, yet never faced
discipline. They were protected by prison guard unions, one of the
strongest forces in American labor.
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Sexualized violence is often used as a tool to subdue inmates whom guards
see as upstarts. In May 2008, while in a restricted housing unit, or the
SHU as it is commonly known, I was sexually assaulted by a guard. The
first person I reported the incident to, another guard, ignored it. I
finally reached a nurse who reported it to a senior officer.
When the state police arrived, I decided not to talk to them because the
harassment Id received in the intervening hours made me fearful. For the
same reason, I refused medical treatment when I was taken to a local
emergency room.
Subsequent interviews with officials at the prison amounted to hazing and
harassment. They accused me of having been a drug user, which was untrue,
and of lying about going to college, though it was true I had. The
investigation, which I found more traumatic than the assault, dragged
on for more than two months until they determined that my allegation
couldnt be substantiated. The laws guidelines were followed, but in
letter not in spirit.
I was also a witness in a case in which an inmate claimed to have been
sexually assaulted by a guard and then told me shed made it up. I
reported her and this time, I was perfectly credible to an
investigator, who praised me for having a conscience and a clear head.
The Justice Department estimates that the total bill to society for
prison rape and sexual abuse is as high as $51.9 billion per year,
including the costs of victims compensation and increased recidivism. If
states refuse to implement the law when the fiscal benefit is so obvious,
something larger is at stake.
According to Allen Beck, senior statistical adviser at the Bureau of
Justice Statistics, institutional culture and facility leadership may be
key factors in determining the level of victimization. Rape persists, in
other words, because its the cultural wallpaper of American correctional
facilities. We preserve the abuse because were down with perps getting
punished in the worst ways.
Compliance does not even cost that much. The Justice Department estimates
that full nationwide compliance would cost $468.5 million per year,
through 2026. Even that much is less than 1 percent of states spending
on corrections. Putting aside the cruelty and pain inflicted, prison rape
costs far more than the implementation of the law designed to stop it.
ORANGE, Conn. ITS been called Americas most open secret:
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, around 80,000 women and
men a year are sexually abused in American correctional facilities. That
number is almost certainly subject to underreporting, through shame or a
victims fear of retaliation. Overall, only 35 percent of rapes and
sexual assaults were reported to the police in 2010, and the rate of
reporting in prisons is undoubtedly lower still.
To tackle the problem, Congress passed the Prison Rape Elimination Act,
signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2003. The way to eliminate
sexual assault, lawmakers determined, was to make Department of Justice
funding for correctional facilities conditional on states adoption of
zero-tolerance policies toward sexual abuse of inmates.
Inmates would be screened to identify possible predators and victims.
Prison procedures would ensure investigation of complaints by outside law
enforcement. Correctional officers would be instructed about behavior
that constitutes sexual abuse. And abusers, whether inmates or guards,
would be punished effectively.
But only two states New Hampshire and New Jersey have fully complied
with the act. Forty-seven states and territories have promised that they
will do so. Using Justice Department data, the American Civil Liberties
Union estimated that from 2003 to 2012, when the laws standards were
finalized, nearly two million inmates were sexually assaulted.
Six Republican governors have neglected or refused to comply, complaining
of cost and other factors. Rick Perry, then the governor of Texas, wrote
to the Justice Department last year stating that 40 percent of the
correctional officers in male facilities in Texas were women, so that
cross-gender viewing (like witnessing inmates in the shower, which
contravenes the legal guidelines) could not be avoided. The mandated
measures, he said, would levy an unacceptable cost on Texas, which has
one of the highest rates of prison sexual assault.
For its noncompliance, Texas is likely to lose just 5 percent of federal
funding for its state prisons, or about $800,000. It will still receive
$15.2 million in federal grants even as inmates continue to be sexually
assaulted. If Congress passes an amendment that Senator John Cornyn,
Republican of Texas, proposed last year, the financial penalty for
noncompliance will be removed altogether.
Ultimately, prisons protect rape culture to protect themselves. According
to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, about half of prison sexual assault
complaints in 2011 were filed against staff. (These reports werent all
claims of forcible rape; it is considered statutory sexual assault for a
guard to have sexual contact with an inmate.)
Image
Credit...Ben Jones
I was an inmate for six years in Connecticut after being convicted of
identity fraud, among other charges. From what I saw, the same small
group of guards preyed on inmates again and again, yet never faced
discipline. They were protected by prison guard unions, one of the
strongest forces in American labor.
Advertisement
SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
Sexualized violence is often used as a tool to subdue inmates whom guards
see as upstarts. In May 2008, while in a restricted housing unit, or the
SHU as it is commonly known, I was sexually assaulted by a guard. The
first person I reported the incident to, another guard, ignored it. I
finally reached a nurse who reported it to a senior officer.
When the state police arrived, I decided not to talk to them because the
harassment Id received in the intervening hours made me fearful. For the
same reason, I refused medical treatment when I was taken to a local
emergency room.
Subsequent interviews with officials at the prison amounted to hazing and
harassment. They accused me of having been a drug user, which was untrue,
and of lying about going to college, though it was true I had. The
investigation, which I found more traumatic than the assault, dragged
on for more than two months until they determined that my allegation
couldnt be substantiated. The laws guidelines were followed, but in
letter not in spirit.
I was also a witness in a case in which an inmate claimed to have been
sexually assaulted by a guard and then told me shed made it up. I
reported her and this time, I was perfectly credible to an
investigator, who praised me for having a conscience and a clear head.
The Justice Department estimates that the total bill to society for
prison rape and sexual abuse is as high as $51.9 billion per year,
including the costs of victims compensation and increased recidivism. If
states refuse to implement the law when the fiscal benefit is so obvious,
something larger is at stake.
According to Allen Beck, senior statistical adviser at the Bureau of
Justice Statistics, institutional culture and facility leadership may be
key factors in determining the level of victimization. Rape persists, in
other words, because its the cultural wallpaper of American correctional
facilities. We preserve the abuse because were down with perps getting
punished in the worst ways.
Compliance does not even cost that much. The Justice Department estimates
that full nationwide compliance would cost $468.5 million per year,
through 2026. Even that much is less than 1 percent of states spending
on corrections. Putting aside the cruelty and pain inflicted, prison rape
costs far more than the implementation of the law designed to stop it.