[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 174 (Tuesday, November 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H7588]
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. I rise again today to draw attention to the epidemic in
our military of rape and sexual assault. Nineteen thousand women and
men each year are raped or sexually assaulted in the military.
Shockingly, almost one-third of female veterans of all generations say
they have been sexually assaulted or raped while in the military, and
more than 70 percent say they experienced sexual harassment while
serving.
In 2008 the Department of Veterans Affairs reported a total of 48,106
female veterans and 43,693 male veterans screened positively for
military sexual trauma.
The prosecution rate of sexual assault is alarmingly low. Only 8
percent of sexual assailants were referred to courts-martial or
military court compared with 40 percent of similar offenders in the
civilian system. This travesty is not being addressed, and I will
continue to speak out on this floor until it is. Survivors can email me
at [email protected] if they would like to speak out.
Today, I would like to tell the story of one of the 8 percent that
were prosecuted, the story of Colonel Michael Robertson, who commanded
Fort Bliss' 31st Combat Support Hospital at Camp Dwyer, a military base
and airfield in the Helmand River Valley in Afghanistan.
Last week, Colonel Robertson was convicted by a military judge of 14
charges, including having pornography on his government computer,
sexually harassing three women, and assaulting five women. Eight women
that served under his command testified at great cost to their careers
and their privacy.
Colonel Robertson routinely touched them without permission on their
breasts, thighs, and buttocks, and encouraged them to look at
pornography on his computer. Some testified the harassment occurred
daily. Sadly, the military careers of these eight women who bravely did
the right thing are almost assuredly destroyed.
A major who filed a claim against Robertson said, ``I don't know if
my career was in jeopardy for doing the right thing. Who in the corps
who supported you is going to trust you in the future?''
Despite repeated warnings, Colonel Robertson also emailed pornography
to friends and female subordinates. A lieutenant colonel who was the
chief nurse under Robertson's command said his command split the staff
and created a toxic environment.
What makes the defense's answer to all of these actions? That all of
these jokes and the touchings were attempts to boost morale. How much
more outrageous must the excuses become before we do something about
it?
So what is the punishment for someone in the military convicted of 14
counts of assaulting and harassing his subordinates who he was assigned
to protect? Is he sent to prison for being a predator? Is he stripped
of his standing the military? Oh, no. Colonel Robertson was ordered to
pay a $30,000 fine over 3 months and spend 3 months in prison. Colonel
Robertson will retire from the Army when he finishes his sentence. His
conviction won't affect his Army retirement or his Federal health
insurance, and he will not be required to register as a sex offender.
It doesn't take a military expert or a psychologist to figure out
that sexual assault and harassment hurts not only the individual victim
but undermines unit cohesion, morale, and overall effectiveness.
The absolute failure to address this behavior is hurting our
military. Like Colonel Robertson, the majority of assailants are older
and of higher rank than their victims. They abuse not only their
authority but also the trust of those they are responsible for
protecting.
The current military structure serves as a safe haven for sexual
predators. They either are never brought to justice at all, or they
receive a sentence like Colonel Robertson's that doesn't come close to
matching their crime.
That's why this week I'll be introducing a bill that would
fundamentally change how sexual assaults are handled in the military.
My bill will take the prosecution, the reporting, the oversight, the
investigation, and the victim care of sexual assaults out of the hands
of the normal chain of command and place the jurisdiction in the hands
of an impartial office staffed by experts, both military and civilian.
I've become painfully aware that if DOD continues to address this
issue at its current pace, the epidemic of military assault will never
end.
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