[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 37 (Wednesday, March 7, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H1215-H1216]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STOP MILITARY RAPE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Speier) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SPEIER. Mr. Speaker, I rise again this morning to highlight the
epidemic of rape and sexual assault in the military. I'm here to decry
a code of dishonor that protects rapists and punishes victims. I'm here
to call out an entrenched chain of command that squashes reports of
sexual assault because they bring unwanted attention to the unit.
I stand here today, as I have 15 previous times, to tell the story of
a U.S. servicemember who was raped by a fellow servicemember and then
robbed of justice by an unfair system that puts too much power in the
hands of a single commander.
The current system of injustice is shamefully unfair. The story I'm
about to tell is of Airman First Class Jessica Nicole Hinves of the
United States Air Force, whose attempt for justice was snatched away by
a single commander who was only on the job for 4 days and reversed a
decision to move forward with a court-martial.
The Department of Defense estimates that more than 19,000
servicemembers were raped or sexually assaulted in 2010, yet only 13
percent of them actually reported the rape; and of those 13 percent,
only 8 percent of the perpetrators were prosecuted and an even smaller
number were convicted.
[[Page H1216]]
Airman First Class Jessica Nicole Hinves, a former member of the Air
Force, was raped in 2009 by a coworker who broke into her room through
the bathroom at approximately 3:00 a.m. She sought medical care and
bravely reported the rape. Friends of the rapist began harassing her,
but Airman Hinves was not intimidated. She rightly pursued the matter
through the military's justice system, and the rapist was scheduled to
stand trial in his court-martial.
But the airman who raped Airman Hinves was never prosecuted. His new
commander intervened and halted the court-martial. The new commander
had only been on the job for 4 days and had no legal training, but
still he dismissed the prosecution and the man who raped Airman Hinves
never was brought to justice. Only 4 days on the job, and the new
commander intervened in the judicial proceedings.
So what happened next? Well, the rapist was given the award for
Airman of the Quarter, and Airman Hinves, who was then transferred to
another base, now suffers from severe panic attacks and anxiety.
Who can blame a victim for not wanting to report a rape or other
humiliating assault? The current process for adjudicating sexual
assault and rape in the military is shockingly unjust and is more
likely to punish a victim than a perpetrator.
Airman Hinves was the victim of a violent crime. In response, she did
everything right. But one commander's decision stood in the way of a
fair proceeding against the perpetrator.
In the current military chain of command, commanders can issue
virtually any punishment or, in this case, the rapist was not punished
at all because the command has complete authority and discretion over
how a degrading and violent assault under their command is handled.
Command discretion empowers the commander to decide if a case goes
forward to court-martial. The same commander is empowered to determine
which JAG officer will serve as prosecutor, which will serve as defense
counsel, who oversees the investigation, and even serve as convening
authority and, in nonjudicial cases, determine disciplinary action. All
these functions are given to the discretion of one person. Simply put,
command discretion sets up a dynamic fraught with conflict of interest
and potential abuse of power.
This chain of command must be disrupted. We can no longer accept that
victims of rape and abuse are beholden to the judgment of a single
superior. Instead, victims should have the benefit of impartiality by
objective experts, which is what my bill, H.R. 3435, the STOP Act does.
The STOP Act would take the prosecution, reporting, oversight,
investigation, and 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, but
retain it in the military.
Now you've heard the story of Airman Hinves. I will continue to tell
stories like hers until this broken system is fixed. I promise to
continue to speak out for those who have been victims of sexual assault
or rape in the military.
I urge you to write me at [email protected].
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