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Crime Victims: An Introduction to Victimology Sixth Edition By Andrew Karmen Chapter Ten: Victims of Rapes and Other Sexual Assaults Victims of Sexual Assault Pro ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Crime Victims: An Introduction to Victimology Sixth Edition


1
Crime Victims An Introduction to
VictimologySixth Edition
  • By Andrew Karmen
  • Chapter Ten
  • Victims of Rapes and Other Sexual Assaults

2
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Pro-victim and anti-rape movement of 70s exposed
    ongoing injustice, abuse and systematic neglect
  • Women fail to report for many reasons
  • CJ system mainly men and more concerned with
    relationship prior to the rape than the violence
    caused by the rape
  • Advocates claim rape is about power and
    controlnot love or passion

3
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • RAPELatin rapere taken by force
  • Common Law Rapeunlawful carnal knowledge
    committed by man against womannot his wife
  • Forcible RapeVictim fears harm if they do not
    comply. Lack of consent is key factor.
  • Aggravated RapeMore than one assailant and use
    of weapon and injuries.
  • Statutory RapeConsensual with minor.

4
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Real Rapes (Ideal Rapes) vs. Date Rapes
  • Real Rapes defined as without question or doubt.
    Elements consist of
  • Unsuspecting female, complete stranger, victim is
    a virgin and virtuous, very young, fights back,
    struggles and suffers injuries, involved in
    wholesome activity when occurred, when
    escapesreports directly to police.
  • Forensic evidence found
  • These cases treated with dignity and with
    sensitivity by the CJ system.

5
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Doubts arise if any of the above missing
  • Some argue that if rape preceded by series of
    consensual sexual overtones, her contributory
    behavior makes less serious
  • Advocates claim that what counts is that she was
    stripped of control, denied right to make
    decision and compelled to submit to someone
    elses sexual desire
  • Legal definition hinges on coercion against
    non-consenting person

6
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Contributory Behaviorforced intercourse preceded
    by series of consensual actsless serious
  • Acquaintance Rapesexistence of prior
    relationship questions seriousness of act
  • Victim Precipitationare some rapes involving
    certain circumstances less serious due to prior
    conduct of the victim?

7
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Victim-Blaming Views
  • Victim used alcohol or drugs
  • Put herself in temptation opportunity situation
  • Suggestive and seductive utterings
  • Hitchhiking
  • Date rape is terrible misunderstanding of what
    she said or meant
  • Certain lifestyles precipitate rape

8
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Two consequences from acceptance of
    Victim-blaming
  • Male less culpable if female shares
    responsibility
  • Girls and women must be better educated to
    prevent miscommunication of their desires
  • Misleading seductiveness might be taken as
    implied consent

9
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Victim-Defending Perspective
  • Nothing erotic or suggestive could justify such a
    hostile act
  • Using force should not be confused with making
    love or engaging in sex
  • Rape is an act of hate and anger, not love or
    lust
  • Rape prevention should not just be aimed at
    females

10
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • Consequences of Sexual Assault
  • Rape Crisis Syndrome
  • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
  • 2/3 of rapes not completed but still leave
    psychological scarsmay commit suicide

11
Incident Prevalence
  • UCR vs. NCVSSee Figure 10.1, page 252
  • NCVSIn 2004, 36 reported their rape to the
    authorities64 not reported
  • Rape trends decreasing since 90s
  • Portrait of victims
  • Female late teens-early twenties
  • Unmarried, low income
  • Black, unemployed, resides in large city
  • 55 acquaintances, 44 strangers

12
Victims of Sexual Assault
  • How the Criminal Justice System Handles Rape
    Victims
  • The Crime
  • Charges Are Pressed Against Defendant
  • The Trial
  • The Sentence

13
Controversy Over Unfounded Accusations
  • Rape is unique crimecredibility of victim
  • Safeguards must prevent honest mistakes and
    perjury/fraudulent allegations
  • Must have corroborative evidencerape kits, DNA,
    lie detector, hospital tests
  • 1982 Presidents Task Force ruled all tests for
    victim credibility in rape cases must stop

14
Accuser vs. Accused
  • 6th Amendment rights to wage a vigorous defense
  • New Rape Victim Rights Legislation
  • Several Defense Strategies
  • Eyewitness error
  • Deny it ever happenedattack victim credibility
  • It happened but consensualshe changed her mind
    after the event

15
Accuser vs. Accused
  • Rape Shield Laws
  • Force and Resistance
  • Reasonableness standarddegree of resistance that
    expresses non-consent can depend on circumstances
  • Best Prevention Strategydual response defense
  • Calling out for help while simultaneously
    pleading with or threatening the attacker

16
Accuser vs. Accused
  • Corroborationnot required unless
  • Victim is a minor
  • Previously intimate with offender
  • Did not promptly report crime
  • Provides a version of events that is inherently
    improbable and self-contradictory

17
Arrest, Prosecution and Adjudication
  • 50 not reported
  • Reported if weapon used or injuries
  • 35 of those charged will have charges dropped
  • 3 will be acquitted
  • 61 convicted35-prison, 10-jail
  • Negotiated plea often justified as it spares
    accuser having to recount the crime

18
Rape Crisis Centers
  • 24-hour hotline
  • Put victim in touch with advocates
  • Accompany to hospital/police/prosecutor
  • Arrange for counseling
  • Trains CJ members
  • Public education efforts
  • Offers self-defense strategies

19
Rediscovery of More Rape Victims
  • Wives raped by husbands
  • Wife has a right to say no
  • Forcible rape of a spouse1st law passed in South
    Dakota, 1975
  • 1990 every state provided no immunity if husband
    filed for divorced or separated
  • Occurrences not knownlack of reporting

20
Rediscovery of More Rape Victims
  • Sexually Assaulted Males
  • NCVS reported 125,000 male rape victims in
    1973-1982
  • 2-3 of reported rapesmale on male
  • Prison Rape Reduction Act of 2003
  • 13 of inmates raped by males
  • Institutions put on notice they must detect,
    prevent and punish rape behind bars

21
Reducing the Threat of RapeThree Approaches
  1. Blame the victim (popular strategy of pastnot
    today) Encourage females to not precipitate the
    crime through careless, reckless or provocative
    behavior
  2. Blame the Offender predators are source of
    problemremove them from society

22
Reducing the Threat of RapeThree Approaches
  • 3. Sociological approach
  • Rape outgrowth of social conditions, cultural
    themes about women as sex objects for sexual
    gratification
  • Real problem is patriarchal society
  • Deterrence through incarceration teaches men a
    lesson
  • Long term strategy is to deal with movies, music,
    magazines encouraging sexual behavior and must
    change attitudes about women

23
Key Terms
Carnal Knowledge Statutory Rape
Heiress stealing Ideal types
Implied consent Rape crisis syndrome
Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Series victimizations
Dual verbal defense
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