[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 170 (Monday, October 23, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H8045-H8046]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SEXUAL ASSAULT VICTIMS IN UNIVERSITIES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, Angie described Amherst College as her
dream school. A vibrant American teenager, she couldn't wait to start
her new life at the perfect college.
Like all universities, Amherst painted itself in a positive light. It
had a good reputation. But Angie had no way of knowing the dark reality
hiding behind that facade.
Her initial memories of her freshman year play along a familiar and
happy college narrative. Her life was full of new friends, new
experiences, and new challenges. But on May 25, everything changed.
That happy narrative came to a screeching halt.
An acquaintance of hers invited her over to watch a movie in his
campus dorm room. Tired from a long day of classes, Angie finally
drifted off to sleep. The next thing she knew, she woke up to find this
individual on top of her sexually assaulting her.
The morning after the attack, Angie felt that she was in a daze, and
she acted like she was in a daze. The illusion of college life filled
with smiling faces and good times had been shattered.
Mr. Speaker, according to the Department of Justice, one in five
women are sexually assaulted during college in the United States--one
in five. Of those, less than 25 percent report the sexual assault.
So Angie, fearing that she would be ignored, doubted, and dismissed,
carried on in hopeless silence. In the 4 months following her rape, she
fell deeper and deeper into depression.
Finally, when the burden became too heavy to bear, she summoned all
her remaining strength and courage and went to the campus counselor.
But she was shocked at the counselor's response.
The counseling center didn't believe she was sexually assaulted. The
counseling center said that she should forgive the rapist. They told
her there is nothing they could do or would do. There was no point in
pressing charges; her rapist was close to graduating anyway.
But she could not forget what had happened to her. She couldn't deal
with the sexual assault. Mr. Speaker, a rape victim cannot just forget
what has happened to them.
Mr. Speaker, I was a judge for 22 years and a prosecutor for 8 in
Texas. I saw a lot of sexual assault victims, a lot of them. They deal
with what happened to them every day, and they feel like the rapist
tried to steal the soul of the victim.
A rape victim once told me: ``Judge, rape is a fate worse than
death.'' And to a lot of victims, that is exactly the way they feel. It
is worse than being murdered.
These sexual assault victims need support, understanding, and care to
become survivors. They first need somebody who will listen to them.
Amherst utterly failed Angie, and that failure pushed her deeper and
deeper into despair. When she voiced that she had been having suicidal
thoughts, university police forcibly escorted her to the emergency room
and left her there.
The doctor who examined her had no training on how to deal with
traumatized rape victims. Utterly lacking in any kind of compassion for
what had happened to her, the doctor told her that she was being
irrational and that her story just didn't make any sense to the doctor.
He didn't believe a school like Amherst would allow her to be raped,
and he thought she just must be crazy. He ordered that she be admitted
into a psychiatric ward and washed his hands of the entire situation.
For 5 days, Mr. Speaker, Angie sat shaking in a sterile room behind
locked doors. She becomes the prisoner for the sexual assault that
happened to her.
A victim's pain and suffering should never be increased because the
hospital doesn't have staff trained to provide victim services for
sexual assault victims. So to ensure this doesn't happen to more
victims like Angie, I have introduced legislation, along with the
gentlewoman from New York (Mrs. Carolyn B. Maloney), my good friend,
that would require a hospital to provide access to a staffer who is
properly trained to provide care sensitive to the
[[Page H8046]]
trauma victim and is concerned about what they have experienced, or
have a plan in place to get the victim to a nearby hospital that does.
This is called a SAFE.
The law should be changed to require a hospital to have a SAFE or a
SANE--that is a sexual assault forensic examiner or a sexual assault
nurse examiner--on staff or have one at a nearby hospital.
This bill is named for Megan Rondini. Megan Rondini is another victim
of sexual assault on campus. She was from Texas and went to the
University of Alabama, and she was denied proper post-sexual assault
treatment at a hospital. This will ensure victims get the care that
they need. Megan couldn't deal with what happened to her, and she
finally committed suicide.
Mr. Speaker, we need to, as a body, be concerned about sexual assault
victims and provide this basic legislation so universities are trained
or have somebody on staff nearby who can deal with sexual assault
victims. That is the least we can do for people like Angie and Megan
Rondini.
And that is just the way it is.
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