Showing posts with label rape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rape. Show all posts

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Statement of the Honorable John Conyers, Jr. for the Markup of H.R. 5578, the “Survivors’ Bill of Rights Act of 2016,” by the Committee on the Judiciary


Dean of the U.S. House
of Representatives
John Conyers, Jr.
H.R. 5578, the “Survivors’ Bill of Rights Act of 2016,” would provide needed protections and rights to victims of sexual assault.

I am proud to be an original cosponsor of this compassionate and thoughtful piece of legislation.

And, I want to congratulate my colleagues -- Representatives Zoe Lofgren and Mimi Waters – for their leadership on this bill, which will help ensure that victims obtain justice.

This legislation would provide victims of sexual assault the right to receive -- 
·         a free medical forensic examination, also known as a rape kit;
·         written notification before their rape kit is destroyed;
·         notification of the results of any forensic examination request; as well as 
·         written notification of their rights and all policies regarding collection and preservation of their rape kit.

In addition, H.R. 5578 would require a rape kit to be preserved for 20 years or for the applicable statute of limitations. 

And, the bill would allow the Department of Justice to award Victims of Crime Act grant funding to entities that provide written notice of rights and policies to survivors.

Advocacy groups, like RISE, are largely responsible for bringing to our attention that the treatment which victims of rape and other sexual offenses receives varies from state-to-state.

In some cases, victims feel their voices go unheard in a system that they are initially told is there to help them through the arduous and sometimes traumatic process that comes after being sexually assaulted.

Victims of sexual assault feel victimized again when they find themselves alone and without help to navigate policies and procedures that block their access to the justice system and, thus, their ability to obtain actual justice.

H.R. 5578 will help ensure that the rights it establishes will be uniformly provided throughout the United States to victims of sexual assault, in federal courts, in every state and every territory. Geographic location would no longer dictate the quality of attention or degree of information provided to victims.

Most importantly, this legislation encourages the use of rape kits and ensures their preservation.  

DNA, obtained from rape kits, is probably the most useful and significant piece of physical evidence in the prosecution of an offense involving nonconsensual sexual contact, enabling investigators and prosecutors to link perpetrators to their crimes.

Accordingly, I support this bill and hope that my colleagues will do the same.

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Thursday, October 2, 2014

CONYERS APPLAUDS ENACTMENT OF LAW TO FUND TESTING OF DNA SAMPLES TO SOLVE CRIMES


WASHINGTON – Today, Congressman John Conyers, Jr. (MI-13) applauded the enactment of the “Debbie Smith Reauthorization Act of 2014” (H.R. 4323), which President Obama signed into law yesterday.  This law authorizes funding of nearly $194 million for each of Fiscal Years 2015-2019 for the Department of Justice to administer various grants, including the Debbie Smith DNA Backlog Grant Program, to assist state and local law enforcement agencies in solving rape and other violent crimes. 

The improved awareness that DNA evidence can aid in solving cases has resulted in law enforcement authorities collecting DNA samples in a wider range of cases and has increased demand for this testing, leading to backlogs of unanalyzed samples of DNA connected to crimes.  This law will provide for the continuation of programs which have been instrumental in addressing this backlog.

This Act is named in honor Debbie Smith, the survivor of a brutal rape who had to wait six years for her perpetrator to be identified and convicted due to delay in testing the DNA sample collected following her attack.  On April 7, 2014, prior to consideration of this bill by the House of Representatives, Congressman Conyers joined Debbie Smith and other Members of Congress in calling for reauthorization of this law, noting the success of the existing programs whose authorizations were expiring and the need to continue and expand them. 

Upon enactment of the Debbie Smith Reauthorization Act of 2014, Congressman Conyers stated, 

U.S. Representative
John Conyers, Jr.
“I am pleased that we have been able to enact the Debbie Smith Reauthorization Act so that state and local law enforcement can enhance their efforts to reduce and hopefully eliminate the national DNA evidence backlog, and bring to justice the perpetrators of rape and other violent crimes.  I am particularly hopeful that this law will lead to the reduction of the backlog of unanalyzed rape kits in Detroit, a problem that our local officials have been working to address.”

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