Oroville Mercury-Register

Officials: Tiny uptick in military sex assault reports

- By Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON >> Reports of sexual assaults among the U.S. military increased by a very small amount in 2020, a year when troops were largely locked down for months as bases around the world grappled with the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Pentagon.

The annual report released Thursday showed that sexual assault reports involving service members went up by about 1%, compared with the 2019 totals. According to the report, there were a total of 7,816 reports in 2020, roughly the same as in 2019. Of those, 6,290 involved members of the military and occured during during their military service — a 1% increase over the 6,236 Service member reports received in 2019.

The report said that the number of assaults reported by civilian victims as well as those involving pre- enlistment attacks decreased.

Army and Marine Corps saw slight increases in the number of reports, while the Navy and Air Force saw small decreases. It is unclear how much of a role the pandemic played in the small increase in assaults last year, or whether any new programs had an impact.

Maj. Gen. Clement Coward, director of the Pentagon’s sexual assault and prevention office, said Thursday that while some progress has been made, “we must do more to prevent this crime.”

While small, the increase is likely to only fuel the escalating debate about the Defense Department’s failure to reduce the number of sexual assaults and harassment over the last decade or more. And it will do little to quash growing arguments that military prosecutio­ns of the crimes must be taken away from commanders and turned over to civilians.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s first directive after he took office in January ordered senior leaders to look into their sexual assault prevention programs, and he later created an independen­t panel to study the matter. That panel has already recommende­d that decisions to prosecute service members for sexual assault be made by independen­t authoritie­s, not commanders.

Such a change would be a major reversal of military practice and a shift long sought by congressio­nal lawmakers. Austin has given service leaders 30 days to review the recommenda­tion and come back to him with their input.

The latest report said that a bit more than two-thirds of the 3,358 cases that were resolved last year resulted in some type of discipline or other action taken against an attacker — roughly the same as the previous year. The punishment­s ranged from courts martial to administra­tive actions. According to the data, commanders concluded that 33 cases were unfounded, and there was insufficie­nt evidence to prosecute in another 801 cases.r

As in previous years, most of the incidents involved young, lower ranking enlisted service members. And, last year about 80 percent of the victims were women and 80 percent of the alleged attackers were men.

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