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Wendy McElroy is a weekly
columnist for
FoxNews.com.
She is also the editor of
ifeminists.com
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Guest Article... |
Confronting Prison Rape
By Wendy McElroy © 2003

A bright light is about to be shone
on an almost unseen social problem: prison rape. On September 4th,
President Bush signed the Prison Rape Elimination Act, which
provides for an annual Department of Justice review on the rate and
effects of prison rape. Why should you care?
According to Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), on December 31,
2002, there were 2,033,331 people incarcerated in the United
States.(Approximately 7% of those in State and Federal prisons are
female.)
The US prison population is rising. In 1980, there were just over
half a million inmates. The BJS estimates that, "If incarceration
rates remain unchanged, 6.6% of U.S. residents born in 2001 will go
to prison during their lifetime." (Other sources place that figure
higher.) The chances are that someone you personally know -- and,
perhaps, care about -- will become a prisoner.
Estimates on the rate of prison rape vary. In 2001, Human Rights
Watch (HRW) released a comprehensive report that estimated between
250,000 to and 600,000 prisoners, overwhelmingly male, are raped
each year.
Prison rape seems to be rising as well. Several academic studies in
the '80s estimated that 7 to 15 percent of inmates were raped: a
rate of 10% amounting to approximately 200,000 people. The apparent
increase may be due to the current practice of double bunking and
using dorm rooms to compensate for overcrowding.
In general, rape is under-reported and this tendency is almost
certainly exacerbated in understaffed prisons where authorities can
be unresponsive or hostile to complaints. To HRW, a suicidal inmate
described his fruitless appeals for help to prison authorities, and
concluded, "The opposite of compassion is not hatred, it's
indifference."
And, yet, the question remains "why should you care?"
One reason: prisoners are human beings. Approximately half of those
imprisoned today are "non-violent". Many have been arrested on drug
charges or for comparatively minor offenses, such as being behind in
child support payments.
he young and "unhardened" prisoners are the most vulnerable to rape.
Consider Rodney Hulin. Arrested at 16 for setting fire to a
dumpster, Hulin received an eight-year sentence. After being
repeatedly raped and dismissed by prison authorities, he killed
himself.
Most victims survive. But as Rep. Robert C. Scott (D-Va.) comments,
"They leave prison much more likely to engage in crime than when
they went in." Barrett Duke -- a VP of the Southern Baptist Ethics &
Religious Liberty Commission that lobbied for the Prison Rape
Elimination Act -- adds, "The sexual brutalization of inmates
exposes men and women to punishment that is not only cruel but that
also severely impedes their opportunity to rehabilitate themselves
to assume lives worthy of the dignity of their humanity."
More than dignity is involved. In 2000, about 25,000 inmates had
HIV. The HIV rate in prison is at least four times that of the
general public. A similar situation exists with other communicable
diseases, like Hepatitis C (HCV), which can be spread through anal
sex and has become the most common blood-borne infection in the U.S.
According to the National Institute of Justice and the National
Commission on Correctional Health Care, the rate of HCV infection in
inmates is 9-10 times higher than in the general public.
You should care about prison rape if only for one reason:
approximately 630,000 inmates were released from prison in
2002 and became the people beside whom you may now be living and
working.
There are several reasons why prison rape has been ignored for so
long. It is an ugly problem from which it is tempting to turn away.
As well, prisoners have no political clout. They do not vote or
lobby which, in effect, means they have no voice. By contrast,
lawmakers often gain popularity by being "hard" on crime and
criminals. The hardness assumes that prisoners deserve what is
coming to them, even young prisoners convicted of non-violent
offenses. But no crime should be punished by rape; HIV should not be
part of a judge's sentence. Rape should not be a fact of life for
anyone.
Ironically, even the revolution in rape awareness in the last few
decades has tended to suppress discussion of prison rape.
Politically correct feminists defined rape as a crime of gender:
that is, men rape women. As with other issues like domestic
violence, they resist the identification of men as victims because
that shifts the focus from women and brings their ideological
assumptions into question. Thus, it was the "anti-feminist"
Concerned Women for America, and not NOW, who lobbied for the Prison
Rape Elimination Act.
The Act may well be a Band-Aid placed over a gaping wound.
Certainly, it does not create the sweeping reforms that would
address the underlying causes of prison rape, such as overcrowding.
And, without such reforms, it is unlikely that the rape-prevention
training programs mandated by the Act will be effective.
But it accomplishes two goals: public awareness and a message to
prison officials inclined to ignore inmate violence. Society can no
longer afford to ignore prison rape. It can no longer afford to
define rape as a gender crime or its victims as female. To end rape,
we must fight it wherever it occurs and defend whoever is being
victimized.
Wendy McElroy© 2003

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