[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 105 (Wednesday, June 16, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4577-S4578]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--S. 1520
Mrs. GILLIBRAND. Madam President, I rise to once again call for this
entire body to have the opportunity to consider and cast their votes on
the Military Justice Improvement and Increasing Prevention Act. This
commonsense reform would ensure that people in the military who have
been subjected to sexual assault and other serious crimes get the
justice they deserve.
I have been calling for a full vote on the floor on this bill since
May 24. That was 23 days ago. Since then, an estimated 1,288
servicemembers will have been raped or sexually assaulted. Two in three
of the survivors will not even report it because they know they are
more likely to face retaliation than to receive justice.
Today I want to share the story of the kind of offender our bill
would address.
On March 30 of this year, SSG Randall Hughes pled guilty to a series
of rapes dating back to 2006 that he committed while the Army looked
the other way. Staff Sergeant Hughes was only brought to justice after
his brave daughter decided to come forward. Had the Army prosecuted him
the first time one of his victims had come forward, his daughter may
have been spared.
At a Super Bowl party in 2017, Staff Sergeant Hughes fed drinks to
his host, a soldier under his care, until the host passed out. He then
approached his host's wife while she was outside the house. He
propositioned her for sex, and when she refused, he forced himself on
her against their grill outside their house and then dragged her inside
their house, where he raped her--all while the husband was passed out
in the next room.
The survivor hid in her bathroom until she could report the ordeal to
CID the next day. CID took a year to investigate a relatively
straightforward rape allegation. The command did nothing to expedite
the investigation or hold CID's feet to the fire.
CID determined that the allegations were credible, but the command
did nothing. Instead of prosecuting him, the command put Staff Sergeant
Hughes on the sergeant first class promotion list.
Hopeless, the survivor asked that something, anything, be done. The
command reacted by putting an administrative remark in his record.
Staff Sergeant Hughes was transferred to a new duty station, Fort
Dix. While at Fort Dix, after years of sexual abuse, his daughter
bravely came forward to report that abuse. CID at Fort Dix then noticed
the administrative remark in his record from the previous rape and
began making inquiries. They learned he had raped two other women and
physically abused his wife.
The command had every tool available to stop Staff Sergeant Hughes
from his serial rapes, including the abuse of his own daughter, but
instead they turned a blind eye and did nothing. Even after he admitted
to his crime and pled guilty, the Army offered a plea deal of 13 years
of confinement--13 years of confinement despite sexually assaulting
three women, including a minor. This serial offender avoided justice
for 15 years. Even when the command was forced to administer justice,
he received a sentence less than we would give a drug offender.
This case is why we need a professional military justice system
worthy of the sacrifices the men and women in our military make every
day. Having leadership at the top that truly cares and that is truly
passionate about prosecuting sexual abuse will have repercussions down
the chain. Our bill does exactly this.
We have 66 Senators who have cosponsored this bill. It deserves a
vote on the floor.
[[Page S4578]]
As if in legislative session, I ask unanimous consent that at a time
to be determined by the majority leader in consultation with the
Republican leader, the Senate Armed Services Committee be discharged
from further consideration of S. 1520 and the Senate proceed to its
consideration; that there be 2 hours of debate equally divided in the
usual form; and that upon the use or yielding back of that time, the
Senate vote on the bill with no intervening action or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. REED. Madam President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. REED. Madam President, once again, I object to the request from
the Senator from New York for the reasons I have previously stated, and
I will repeat again what I have said publicly and what I have committed
to.
I support removing prosecution of sexual assault, the types of crimes
that Senator Gillibrand discussed, from the chain of command. But her
bill goes further to include crimes not related to sexual assault. The
removal of sexual assault crimes from the chain of command will be an
historic change in the military justice system and one which Senator
Gillibrand can claim great responsibility for effecting. We must take
care, however, that we do it thoughtfully, in a manner that does not
break the military justice system.
The worst thing we can do to victims of sexual assault is to move a
bill through that can't be implemented effectively or on time, creates
too large a workload for too few qualified military judge advocates,
imperils prosecutions, leads to convictions being overturned on appeal,
or results in neglected cases because the necessary attention cannot be
devoted to them.
According to the Department of Defense, the number of full-time
colonels, lawyer disposition authorities required to execute the system
as proposed, which would take effect 180 days from enactment, exceeds
the number of judge advocates in that senior grade. And this doesn't
account for her bill's requirement that these O-6 judge advocates have
significant trial and criminal law experience or that they would not
then be available for other important assignments reserved for O-6s,
such as military judges and division, corps, or combatant command judge
advocates.
The heads of the service Judge Advocate General's Corps have
previously raised concerns about the implementation timeline, the
resources necessary to execute, and a host of other inconsistencies
with the current system that would have to be addressed to be sure of
successful implementation. These are the very military lawyers that
Senator Gillibrand's bill would empower to make prosecutorial
decisions, which includes an evaluation of a far greater number of
cases than simply those that end up in court-martial. These are the
issues that we need discuss in the committee and not dispose of in an
amendment on the floor. The committee will do this and do it
faithfully. And I am very confident that we will be able to move
legislation that does remove any crimes related to sexual misconduct
from the current command to a system that Senator Gillibrand is
proposing.
With that, I would reiterate my objection.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mrs. GILLIBRAND. As you heard from the chairman of the committee, he
only intends on taking one crime out of the chain of command, and that
is sexual assault. And the reason why that is so problematic is, No. 1,
it will continue to undermine women in the military, marginalize them
and isolate them, creating a ``pink court'' that all legal experts have
agreed would be highly ineffective and would harm the military justice
system.
Second, our allies have already made this move. They have taken all
serious crimes out of the chain of command and given it to trained
military prosecutors in the UK, Israel, Germany, Netherlands, and
Australia. In those instances, they did it specifically for defendants'
rights. And we have a similar problem in this country because right now
we have a great deal of racial bias in who gets punished.
If you are Black or Brown in the U.S. military today, you are 2.5
times more likely to be punished. And most commanders are White
commanders. There is further data that shows most Black and Brown
servicemembers have either experienced or witnessed racism within the
ranks.
If we want to fix this criminal justice system, you need a bright
line, and it should be at all serious crimes. That is how we fix the
military justice system. That is how we give justice to sexual assault
survivors.
And for the chairman to say today that it would cost too much money
or that they don't have sufficient resources or sufficient lawyers, it
isn't true. And those are the same arguments that were used over the
last 8 years about excluding sexual assault from the chain of command
as well.
So I don't think these are legitimate arguments. I think they are
brought up year after year as just a way to put an impediment in front
of the reform that is needed to fix the system.
I now yield the floor to my colleague Senator Grassley.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Senator Gillibrand, as 1 of the 65 other cosponsors of
this legislation, I think you are to be commended for every day coming
to the floor, to be as consistent in being for this legislation as you
have been since 2013. And every one of us thank you for your
persistence. You need to be congratulated. And all the people who have
been harmed by sexual assaults over the last decades owe you a great
deal of gratitude for that.
So I am here to join Senator Gillibrand in asking for a vote on this
crucial legislation. And, obviously, today we aren't going to get it,
but eventually it is going to happen. You can't say no to 66 Senators
that want this legislation. The Military Justice Improvement and
Increasing Prevention Act has that many bipartisan cosponsors, and it
is past time for this bill to become law.
This legislation was first introduced by Senator Gillibrand and me
and other Senators 8 years ago and has gained more and more support
each year. Senators who previously were skeptical have come around and
realized that the Department of Defense can't handle the pervasive
problems of sexual assault on their own.
The Armed Services Committee and the Department of Defense have had
more than enough time to consider this idea. They have told us that
they have it under control and tried other approaches. Those approaches
have not worked. Women and men in the military continue to face high
rates of sexual assault and retaliation. It is clear this bill is
needed.
By moving the decision to prosecute out of the chain of command,
perpetrators of sexual assault and other serious crimes will be held
accountable. Survivors will have more confidence in the process.
Retaliation will be less likely. We have been waiting almost a decade.
There is no need any longer to wait. I urge my colleagues to allow this
bill to move forward today. And, obviously, it isn't going to move
forward today, but Senator Gillibrand will be back here tomorrow,
asking the same thing. And I applaud you for doing that.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah