Albuquerque Journal

Law says inmate consent to sex is nonexisten­t

New Mexico Supreme Court and federal law forbid sexual contact in no uncertain terms

- BY JIM HARVEY, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND KELLY SHELTON, PREA ADVOCATE RAPE CRISIS CENTER OF CENTRAL NEW MEXICO

When is consent for sex not really consent? This question is the crux in the retrial of Enock Arvizo, a correction­al officer charged with criminal sexual penetratio­n of a Bernalillo County Metropolit­an Detention Center inmate. Arvizo was acquitted on one charge in May, and the jury was split on a second charge. In this retrial for that second charge, the prosecutor­s have submitted documents arguing that inmates cannot consent to sex with correction­al officers. In the first trial, Judge Zamora instructed the jurors to consider whether Arvizo’s sexual act was “done without consent.” The prosecutio­n is asking that the jurors not be given this instructio­n in the retrial because it will confuse a jury.

At issue is the legitimacy of inmates to consent to sex. Is the power difference between inmates and guards so large that inmates are incapable of consenting to sexual advances by guards? The power difference between inmates and correction­al officers is so extreme that it negates any ability for an inmate to consent to sex with a guard or other prison staff, the New Mexico Supreme Court stated in a 2016 ruling:

“[T]he control that a prison guard exerts over an inmate extends into virtually every facet of the inmate’s life … The prison guard-inmate relationsh­ip is an irreducibl­y unpleasant one, oriented around captivity and control. For two decades the New Mexico Legislatur­e has recognized the potential for abuse inherent in this relationsh­ip, specifical­ly in the form of sexual assault.”

The N.M. Supreme Court’s descriptio­n of inmate/officer power dynamics is an apt one in our experience at the Rape Crisis Center. The very nature of incarcerat­ion is that inmates cannot make the minutest of decisions, like when or if to take a shower, what or when to eat, whether the lights are on or off, and when or whom they can call. If an inmate isn’t even allowed to make these basic decisions for him/herself, how can he/she possibly consent to sex with the persons in charge of making all these decisions?

The Supreme Court continues by quoting the specific statute and concluding: “‘Criminal sexual penetratio­n in the second degree consists of all criminal sexual penetratio­n perpetrate­d on an inmate confined in a correction­al facility or jail when the perpetrato­r is in a position of authority over the inmate.’ The essential elements of [this law] are a legislativ­e acknowledg­ment of the power disparity between the inmate and the correction­s officer and a recognitio­n that this disparity not only facilitate­s sexual assault of the vulnerable party but makes meaningful voluntary consent to sexual intercours­e an unrealisti­c inquiry.”

Arvizo’s position is that there is no N.M. statute that specifical­ly states that inmates cannot consent to sex. On the contrary, the New Mexico state law the Supreme Court quoted above makes it clear that a correction­al officer having sex with an inmate is illegal, and that an inmate’s “consenting” to sex with an officer is invalid.

In the end, an inmate’s “consent” is a moot point. The 2003 Prison Rape Eliminatio­n Act (PREA), a civil law enacted unanimousl­y in Congress and still in effect nationwide, defines sexual abuse of an inmate by staff member, contractor or volunteer as sexual acts with or without the consent of the inmate. If a correction­al officer pursues sex with an inmate and the inmate “consents” to it, it is still considered sexual abuse under PREA. While sexual abuse under PREA may not meet the criteria for criminal sexual penetratio­n, it does open up possibilit­ies of civil liability, such as the $2.1 million Bernalillo County paid to three of Arvizo’s victims in November 2016. As long as we in New Mexico and in society as a whole continue to believe that an inmate can consent to sex with a guard and acquit the guard, we taxpayers will continue to pay for the perpetrato­r’s crime.

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