[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 167 (Thursday, November 3, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H7265]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SEXUAL ASSAULT IN THE MILITARY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Speier) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SPEIER. Mr. Speaker, I rise again today with a heavy heart to
talk about sexual assault and rape in the military, an epidemic in this
country that must be addressed.
As I've said before, the Department of Defense, by its own
statistics, has stated that 19,000 servicemembers, women and men, every
year are raped by fellow soldiers. I will continue to share these
stories until something changes. Survivors can email me at
[email protected] if they want to speak out.
Each of these soldiers was raped by another soldier, and each was
subjected to a system of justice that protects the perpetrators and
punishes the victims. The story I will tell today is the story of
Corporal Sarah Albertson. This gets to the rot at the root of the
justice system in the military, and that is: a commander, one person,
has complete and total discretion in deciding how and if sexual assault
and rape are dealt with.
Corporal Albertson served in the Marine Corps from 2003 to 2008. On
August 27, 2006, Corporal Albertson was raped by a fellow marine, a man
who outranked her. That's right, he outranked her and raped her.
Right after the rape, Corporal Albertson went to her commander to
inform him of what had happened. Instead of detaining her alleged
assailant, calling in criminal investigators, or sending Corporal
Albertson to the hospital to preserve the evidence that would
corroborate her story, he told Corporal Albertson that because she had
consumed some alcohol, if she reported the rape, she would be charged
with inappropriate barracks conduct. She was then told not to discuss
her rape with anyone and was also ordered to ``respect'' her rapist and
follow his orders because he outranked her. It soon became clear to
Corporal Albertson that others knew about what had happened, and her
other superiors, acting with the open support of her commander,
ostracized and harassed her.
Corporal Albertson sought counseling. The military counselor that
Corporal Albertson went to, in no uncertain terms, advised her
commander that she should not be forced to interact with her rapist and
that Corporal Albertson was suffering from panic attacks due to these
interactions. Her commander ignored the professional advice and forced
her to interact with her rapist for another 2 years. And when she had
panic attacks, she was punished.
This same commander also refused Corporal Albertson's request to
change housing. Instead, he forced her to live one floor below her
rapist for 2 years. The commander also required her to disclose
medications she had been prescribed to counter the trauma. Now,
Corporal Albertson never filled those prescriptions; but, nonetheless,
by having to disclose those prescriptions, she lost her security
clearance.
But what happened to her rapist? Not a thing. In fact, I venture to
say he has been promoted, not just once, probably twice, maybe three
times. I have become painfully aware that at the rate DOD is working to
address this issue, the epidemic of military sexual assault will never
end.
Mr. Speaker, this is a national travesty. Congress, the
administration, the Department of Defense, all of us, all of us should
be ashamed of what is going on in the military.
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