[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 39 (Monday, March 10, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1373-S1374]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SEXUAL ASSAULT
Mr. LEVIN. Madam President, the Senate takes another step forward in
combating sexual assault in the military. Thanks to the leadership of
Senators McCaskill, Ayotte, Fischer, and others, we can improve
legislation which adds important new protections for victims of sexual
assault and strengthens our ability to investigate and prosecute these
crimes.
This legislation we will be voting on bolsters and improves upon the
provisions to combat sexual assault which were included in the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014. Among the reforms
included in that bill and are now law were provisions which make it a
crime to retaliate against a servicemember for reporting a sexual
assault; that require every servicemember who reports a sexual assault
to get a special victims' advocate who works for them, not for the
command or for the court; and also this recently enacted law requires a
higher level review of decisions not to prosecute an allegation of
sexual assault.
The reforms in the bill we will be voting on shortly are significant
additions to that recently enacted law. First, this bill will be making
an important change in how we prosecute sexual assault crimes by
amending the Military Rules of Evidence to eliminate what is known as
the good soldier defense, which has allowed servicemembers to argue
that their good military performance is evidence of their innocence
when charged with a crime. The military culture has been too slow to
grasp the painful truth that even a successful professional can also be
a sexual predator. This important reform in the bill we are considering
will help to alter that culture.
The bill also strengthens oversight of commanders' decisions on
prosecution. Under reforms we passed last year, any decision by a
commander not to prosecute a sexual assault case is reviewed by the
next highest authority in the chain of command. When that decision
contradicts a recommendation to prosecute from the commander's senior
legal adviser, that review is done by the service Secretary, the
highest civilian authority in each military service. The bill we are
now going to consider would require the same review if a commander's
decision not to prosecute conflicts with the recommendation of the
senior prosecutor who would try the case.
The bill also strengthens victims' input into prosecution decisions.
The reforms we passed last year require that every victim of a military
sexual assault be provided with a special victims' counsel--an attorney
who works
[[Page S1374]]
not for the commander or the court but for the victim. The bill before
us requires that these victims' counsels advise victims on the
advantages and disadvantages of seeing their case prosecuted in a
military court or in a civilian court. The bill also requires that when
victims express a preference for one or the other, that preference be
given great weight.
The bill before us includes other important new protections for
sexual assault victims. For example, it allows victims of a sexual
assault who leave the military to challenge the terms or the
characterization of their discharge. The bill requires a confidential
process enabling victims to seek a review of discharge decisions in
order to look for possible instances of retaliation for their having
reported a crime.
The bill we will soon vote on also includes an important new
provision to boost accountability for commanders. It requires their
performance appraisals analyze whether they have established a command
climate in which sexual assault allegations are properly and fairly
handled and in which a victim can report a sexual assault without fear
of reprisal or ostracism.
These and other provisions in the McCaskill-Ayotte-Fischer bill add
further weight to the important reforms included in the National
Defense Authorization Act we adopted and was enacted very recently. The
bill we will be voting on contains real important reforms which deserve
not just our support and our votes but our thanks to Senators
McCaskill, Ayotte, Fischer, and others for crafting these additional
reforms because they will surely make a major contribution in
protecting the troops who protect us.
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I rise in support of S. 1917, the
Victims Protection Act of 2014, and S. 1752, the Military Justice
Improvement Act of 2013.
I have worked on this issue for years, and I am tired of lip service
and empty promises of zero tolerance policies. Sexual assault in the
military and service academies continues to rise. The data speaks for
itself. Roughly 26,000 sexual assaults took place in the military last
year.
I am so proud of the seven women on the Armed Services Committee who
led this effort. And I appreciate the fine men who supported them,
especially Chairman Carl Levin.
We are now 20 women total in the Senate. We disagree on some issues,
even the bills before us. But we agree on the goal of providing more
prosecutorial tools to punish criminals, ensuring fairness in the
process, and getting help to victims.
The 2013 National Defense Authorization Act, NDAA, included more than
30 reforms addressing sexual assault in the military. They include: 13
prosecutorial reforms, 5 reforms to improve reporting of crimes, 10
reforms to improve victims services, and 2 reforms to expand the
training of first responders.
This is a historic piece of legislation that takes a serious and
significant step towards addressing this issue.
However, our work is not done. That is why I support Senator
McCaskill's and Senator Gillibrand's bills to further reform our
military justice system.
Senator McCaskill's bill builds on the provisions included in the
2013 NDAA by providing additional support to victims. It prevents
defendants from using a good military character defense unless it is
relevant to the crime. And it ensures these improvements also apply to
the service academies which are also dealing with the epidemic of
sexual assault.
I also support Senator Gillibrand's bill which would take the job of
deciding which crimes to prosecute out of the hands of commanders and,
instead, give it to independent military prosecutors with expertise in
these crimes.
This approach has value for victims, commanding officers, and the
accused. Victims are assured of a fair process. Commanders are given an
independent source on an issue that they might not have expertise or
experience. And those accused of sexual violence get legal protections
through the process.
These two bills take another step towards cracking the code on
addressing sexual assault in the military. Our men and women in uniform
face enough stresses on the battlefield. We can't allow sexual violence
to be another one.
I urge my colleagues to support these bills.
I yield the floor and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. COLLINS. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(The remarks of Ms. Collins pertaining to the introduction of S. 2100
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
Ms. COLLINS. I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
____________________