Orlando Sentinel

Poor police work is letting rapists go free. That has to stop.

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There is a sexual assault taking place right now. Every 68 seconds, someone in America is sexually assaulted. More than 97% of perpetrato­rs get off scot-free.

A major reason is mismanagem­ent of physical evidence. It’s time for police work to enter the modern era — and employ the latest technology for collecting and processing evidence. Otherwise, rapists will continue to go free.

The evidence in a sexual-assault investigat­ion is typically the product of a six-hour physical exam conducted by a medical profession­al, who searches the victim’s body for any material — like DNA — that could help identify the perpetrato­r. The informatio­n and material gathered is known as a “sexual assault kit.”

As a survivor of sex traffickin­g and current advocate for victims, I know firsthand how invasive and retraumati­zing these exams can be. But we are led to believe that the informatio­n collected will help deliver justice.

That faith is often misplaced. In far too many cases, the evidence in sexual assault kits is never used.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t, for instance, reported a backlog of more than 13,400 untested kits in the state in 2015. One of them belonged to an Orlando woman who waited more than 30 years to learn that her attacker was a serial rapist — who was already serving a life sentence for another sexual assault conviction.

Every unprocesse­d kit like hers represents a crime left unsolved — and a perpetrato­r likely to attack again.

When sexual assault kits are tested and used as evidence, another layer of dysfunctio­n can appear. Court cases often require proof of the “chain of custody” for a piece of evidence. Prosecutor­s need to be able to prove the whereabout­s of a rape kit, for example, as it travels from the emergency room, to the police, to the crime lab, to the prosecutor, and then to the courts. That evidence may be on the move for years.

The chain of custody is one of the first elements a good defense attorney will scrutinize. If he or she can prove a break in the chain of custody, the evidence is not admissible at trial. And if a defendant challenges the chain of custody, even a minor mistake can lead to an acquittal.

Long backlogs and mismanagem­ent of evidence don’t just impact conviction­s. They also serve as powerful disincenti­ves for women who wish to report sexual assault.

Today, any given sexual assault in Florida has just a 25% chance of ever being reported to the police. Why go through an invasive, demeaning, physical exam if the evidence is going to end up in a storage closet — or if mismanagem­ent by police is going to let the rapist off on a technicali­ty?

There’s no excuse for losing track of evidence in 2022. We can look at our phones to determine how many houses away our Amazon packages are. Our financial and health records are online, available on demand. But some police department­s still rely on faulty software or even paper files to track evidence. And multiple states, like Texas and Massachuse­tts, do not require police to keep track of clothing, blood, and urine in a rape kit.

Until recently, Florida was one of them. In 2015, state law enforcemen­t agencies began receiving state and federal funding to update and streamline testing procedures, leading to the eliminatio­n of the backlog of untested kits. And a law enacted last year will establish a mandatory statewide tracking system for rape kits, complete with a portal to help survivors keep tabs on the evidence.

Similar upgrades — implementi­ng barcodes and RFID tags, combined with good software — will bring evidence-collection and management up to an appropriat­e technologi­cal standard nationwide. It will require significan­t investment by federal and state government­s. But newer tools can maximize the impact of those public dollars.

We have the technology to get more perpetrato­rs of sexual assault off the street. We need law-enforcemen­t agencies to deploy those tools so victims aren’t telling their stories in vain.

Christine McDonald is an author and advocate for victims of human traffickin­g and sexual assault based in Kansas City, Mo. A film about her life, “I Will Rise,” was featured at the Internatio­nal Christian Film & Music Festival in Orlando last week.

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By Christine McDonald

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