[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 109 (Thursday, July 19, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H5019-H5020]
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. I rise again today to talk about military sexual trauma.
It's a cancer, it's ubiquitous, it's unabated, and regretfully,
unaddressed.
There was Tailhook in 1991. There was Aberdeen in 1996. There were
scandals at the military academies. There were hearings, there were
reports, there were toothless recommendations. So here we are, again,
with yet another scandal.
At this very moment, military training instructor Luis Walker stands
before a court martial for raping and assaulting recruits at Lackland
Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas. Walker's job is to train freshly
minted new Air Force recruits, many of them still in their teens. In
all, there are 28 charges against him and 10 victims. Walker is a
sexual predator.
On Tuesday, a victim testified that right after graduating from boot
camp, Walker approached her while she sat outside on a bench waiting
for a bus that would take her to technical training school. Walker came
up and ordered her to get some bleach from a supply room, and then he
followed her. Once inside, he closed the door and took off his training
instructor's hat. ``I'm not here for bleach, am I,'' she asked. While
Walker had intercourse with her on a couch, she wondered, ``My God, I
hope he has a condom on.''
On Wednesday, another victim testified that while on laundry detail
one day, Walker showed up and told her to follow him to get some
towels, but to wait 5 minutes so the surveillance cameras would not
capture them going up together. Once inside a dorm, he pulled her into
a flight office, kissed her, and told her to perform oral sex on him.
She said she did what she was told.
Walker's defense attorneys argue that because the women never
forcefully resisted, the sex was consensual. The defense also argues
that because the women never came forward to report the incidents, they
must not have felt victimized.
If this happens in any high school in this country--if the prized
English teacher, band instructor, or football instructor had sex with
his student, we would be outraged and we would demand action. That
teacher would be fired. Yet at Lackland, where some of the recruits are
just 18 or 19 years old, we rationalize the behavior of the perpetrator
and we blame the victim. Apparently, we have a different definition of
zero tolerance for sex offenders in the military world than we do for
them in the civilian world. What does zero tolerance mean in the
military? Is that just a catchphrase?
The 35,000 Air Force recruits who funnel through Lackland each year
are mostly confined to the base for 6\1/2\ weeks of training. They get
one 3-minute phone call once a week. Recruits live and breathe basic
training and follow each and every order of their instructor. One rape
victim at Lackland said, ``Nothing a military training instructor says
ends with a question mark.''
Walker is not the only predator charged at Lackland. Seven additional
training instructors have been charged with sexual misconduct with
trainees. At least another five are under investigation. One
instructor, Staff Sergeant Craig LeBlanc, bragged about his conquests
to his colleague, who waited a month before he reported the incidents.
Out of loyalty, the colleague stayed quiet. Once he finally reported
LeBlanc's misconduct with recruits, that instructor was ostracized by
fellow training instructors for being a tattletale. Is this really a
culture of zero tolerance?
Congress needs to investigate and to hold an independent hearing on
the widespread sex abuse at Lackland Air Force Base. In the last 3
years since
[[Page H5020]]
Luis Walker started working at Lackland, roughly 21,000 female airmen
have cycled through basic training. Have they been interviewed by
investigators to determine if they, too, have been raped and sexually
assaulted at Lackland? How widespread is this epidemic?
At Lackland, out of the 31 identified victims, only one has reported
the crime. Why are victims scared to come forward? Internal
investigations will not get to the bottom of this. Congress needs to
act. I called for a hearing in June, and received no response. Last
week, I was joined by a bipartisan group of 77 Members of Congress
calling for a hearing. We've received no response. I'm sick of waiting
for action. The 19,000 members of our military who are raped each and
every year deserve better than catchphrases. They deserve justice.
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