[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 181 (Wednesday, November 13, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6543-S6544]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Survivors' Bill of Rights in the States Act of 2019
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Mr. President, I am pleased to join Mr. Grassley from
Iowa on the floor today to talk about important legislation that we are
cosponsoring that built upon previous efforts that both of us were
engaged in to protect survivors of sexual assault in the criminal
justice system. The efforts to extend rights to sexual assault
survivors across the country is critically important, and I am hopeful
that, once our legislation is known to our colleagues, that they will
join us in passing this important bipartisan bill.
Amanda Nguyen of the Rise organization initially contacted our office
in 2015. I know she also worked with Senator Grassley. When she came to
us and detailed her harrowing story of sexual assault, she was raped,
and then she felt like she was raped again by a criminal justice system
that was not responsive to the challenges of survivors of sexual
assault. Amanda described the system that further traumatized survivors
and provided scarce protections for their rights.
Evidence of assault was being destroyed without survivors' consent,
and survivors were forced to periodically follow up with law
enforcement to preserve that evidence. The broken process that
survivors were forced to endure resulted in a system where they were
often re-victimized. Instead of a process that helped them move forward
with their lives as they pursued justice, survivors were confronted
with the trauma of reliving their attack each time they sought to
preserve evidence or gather information about their case.
Well, because of Amanda's efforts, the Sexual Assault Survivors'
Rights Act was created. It was legislation that provided for the first
legally recognized set of rights for survivors that could be enforced
in a court of law. Senator Grassley took that legislation, he included
it in the Adam Walsh Reauthorization Act, and it was signed into law.
It has provided survivors with greater protections in Federal cases
because of focus on notice, on access to evidence, and on the
preservation of sexual assault evidence collection kits.
By creating this set of court enforceable rights at the Federal
level, Congress established a model for the States to adopt similar
legislation to protect the rights of survivors. So far, 21 States,
including my home State of New Hampshire, have adopted that legislation
to guarantee survivors certain basic rights in the criminal justice
system.
Now, unfortunately, we are trying to figure out how to encourage
other States to follow the lead of Congress, States that have not yet
adopted legislation protecting survivors. That is why the bill that
Senator Grassley and I are here to discuss today is so critically
important. The Survivors' Bill of Rights in the States Act, the
legislation we are cosponsoring, would establish a grant program
accessible to States that have in place a law which guarantees the
rights contained in the Sexual Assault Survivors' Rights Act.
The grand amount would be a percentage of the funding that the State
receives under the Stop Violence Against Women Formula Grant Program.
States could then use the funds to implement survivor rights, preserve
sexual assault evidence collection kits, reduce the backlog of kits,
and provide support for victim services.
Congress has previously passed legislation using the Stop Formula
Grants to incentivize States to adopt legislation, and this is the
perfect example of why that kind of an approach would be successful. No
survivor should be compelled to bear the indignity of petitioning law
enforcement merely to ensure that they are given a fair shake in the
criminal justice process. It is my hope that this legislation will lead
to an increase in States passing bills to protect survivors' rights.
I think it is important that Congress again show survivors that we
are behind them, that we will stand up with them for their rights. The
Survivors' Bill of Rights in the States Act would do just that.
I am so pleased to be joining Senator Grassley in this effort. I
think, with this bipartisan support, we can get support from all of our
colleagues to enact this follow-on legislation into law and provide the
additional support that survivors need.
[[Page S6544]]
Thank you, Mr. President.
I yield to my colleague, Senator Grassley.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, first of all, it is a pleasure to work
with Senator Shaheen on this bill. I am very happy to work together. We
have the same goals in mind. For the cynical people outside of
Washington, DC, that say there is never any Republican or Democratic
cooperation, there is kind of a rule around here that Senator Shaheen
and I are examples of, but it applies to all 100 Senators.
If you really want to get something done, you have to seek
bipartisanship in this body. I can quantify that in this way. There are
53 Republicans. There are 47 Democrats. But if there were 53 Democrats
and 47 Republicans, the same rule would apply.
About 99 percent of the legislation that gets done around here has to
have 60 votes to stop debate before you can even vote on the bill. So
obviously, even if all 53 Republicans were voting together--and that
doesn't happen very often--you still wouldn't get the 60 votes to pass
a piece of legislation. So that is why almost every major piece of
legislation that gets through here--and this example of Shaheen-
Grassley is just another example--it is because you seek
bipartisanship, and it is just nice that it has to be that way.
So addressing this issue, I can say I associate myself with the
remarks of Senator Shaheen and sit down, but there is kind of a rule
around the Senate. Everything that has been said on this bill has been
said, but I haven't said it yet, and I am going to say it.
I recently introduced S. 2770, known as the Survivors' Bill of Rights
in the States Act of 2019, with Senator Shaheen and Senator Tillis.
This measure is a companion to what Congresswoman Speier developed and
introduced in the other Chamber. It builds on legislation entitled the
Survivors' Bill of Rights Act that we adopted in 2016.
As chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee in the last Congress, I
worked closely with a young woman, Amanda Nguyen, on the development of
that 2016 measure prior to its introduction. Amanda, a survivor of
sexual assault, found and leads the nonprofit organization known as
Rise, R-I-S-E.
She also worked with Senator Shaheen on the same legislation,
introducing the final version in this Chamber. We incorporated that
2016 package of rights into an amendment that I offered to another
measure before the Senate Judiciary Committee. In May 2016, that
legislation passed this Chamber 89 to 0. In October 2016, the House
version, which was introduced later, was signed by the President.
The bills that we introduced this month on the 2016 Survivors' Bill
of Rights, it makes each State eligible to receive a Federal grant to
implement a similar package of rights for victims of sex crimes at the
State level. Such rights include, for example, the right to know the
results of your forensic exam, the right to have evidence preserved for
a certain period, and the right to notice before your forensic kit is
destroyed.
A State also may use its Justice Department grants to preserve sexual
assault evidence kits, reduce the number of kits awaiting testing, and
extend additional assistance to crime victims under our legislation.
Finally, the measure we introduced authorizes 20 million annually for
each of the fiscal years 2021 through 2024 to support the
implementation of the new grant program established by this bill. I
urge my colleagues to join us in cosponsoring the Survivors' Bill of
Rights in the States Act of 2019.
I thank Senator Shaheen for joining in this effort and leading this
bill and, most importantly, to compliment her over a long period of
time in the Senate--and probably even before she came to the Senate--
her commitment to working with me and with people generally on the
issue of increased protection for victims of sexual assault.
Again, I thank Congresswoman Speier and her staff for initiating this
measure in the House and for working so hard to develop a bicameral,
bipartisan measure, and I thank Senator Shaheen once again.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
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