[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 68 (Wednesday, May 15, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3504-S3505]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SEXUAL ASSAULT IN THE MILITARY
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, about an hour ago I was on the telephone
with Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel. It was a somber conversation. We
were talking about the most recent disclosure yesterday of sexual
assault in the military. The Secretary said he was beside himself with
the knowledge that this continues and that he was going to do something
about it. I trust that he will.
Last night we learned of the latest and most reprehensible incident.
The Army is investigating a sexual assault prevention and response
coordinator at Fort Hood, TX, for being engaged in abusive sexual
contact and other abusive crimes.
Secretary Hagel has directed rescreening and retraining of all sexual
assault prevention coordinators and military recruiters. I know he is
upset
[[Page S3505]]
about this; I could hear it in his voice. I join him in that response.
He understands this is a pervasive crisis that threatens the moral
underpinnings of our military. At risk are core values of trust,
discipline, and respect that every one of our servicemembers expects
and deserves to protect each other and ultimately to protect America.
Next Wednesday the Army will appear before my Appropriations
Subcommittee on Defense. We will be asking some hard questions: What
has gone wrong? Why are so many men and women charged with stopping
sexual assault being found guilty of it themselves? This is a serious
issue.
According to the Pentagon survey, there were 26,000 sexual assaults
in the U.S. military last year. That is a 35-percent increase since
2010. That is more than 70 service women and men sexually assaulted
every single day in our military, and that is unacceptable. We also
know that only a fraction of those incidents are reported. Fewer than
3,400 incidents a year, in fact, are reported to authorities. In nearly
800 of those instances, the victim seeks help but declines to file a
formal complaint.
I commend every one of those men and women who had the courage to
come forward and name their accused. It is an unimaginably tough thing
to do, but it is the right thing for them and it is the right thing for
our military. Nevertheless, we have very far to go before we can say
with confidence that the system is working to prevent these incidents,
protect the victims, and prosecute the perpetrators. For instance, last
month a U.S. commanding general based in Italy overturned a military
jury's conviction of an officer charged with aggravated sexual
assault--overturned it. That sent a chill through the ranks and caused
increasing fear among victims that when they had the courage to step
forward, ultimately nothing would happen.
I appreciated that Secretary Hagel immediately called for a change in
the Uniform Code of Military Justice. I know that Senator Carl Levin,
Senator Jim Inhofe, and the Armed Services Committee are working to act
swiftly on those recommended reforms. They have my full support.
I also wish to commend some of my colleagues who have really stepped
up on this issue. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, a member of
the Armed Services Committee, has shown real leadership, as have
Senator Patty Murray, chairman of the Budget Committee, and Senator
Kelly Ayotte. They came together to introduce a bill I support, S. 871,
the Combating Military Sexual Assault Act. I also commend Senator
Claire McCaskill, who has been outspoken in the Senate Armed Services
Committee on this issue.
The bill I am talking about would provide victims with a special
victims' counsel to assist them through the process, and it would
strengthen the military prosecution system and ensure that the Guard
and Reserve have response coordinators available at all times
regardless of their duty status. We also have to ensure that each
service has a robust investigative team with real expertise when it
comes to sexual assault.
These are just some of the many reforms the Pentagon must work on
with Congress to make a difference. I am committed to working with
Secretary Hagel and the entire Pentagon leadership to ensure that every
servicemember can serve free of incidents of violence and trauma like
the one that was reported this week. I urge all of my colleagues to
support these reforms for our servicemembers.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as
if in morning business for up to 15 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? Without objection, it is
so ordered.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Madam President, I wish to thank the distinguished
Senator from Illinois for his statement. We serve together on the
Judiciary Committee. I hope that in that committee as well we can work
on ways to improve the prosecution--particularly of rape offenses--
within the military by the Department of Justice.
We need to break through the agreement that now prevents the
Department of Justice from prosecuting those crimes for the crimes they
are simply because they take place in the military.
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