Porterville Recorder

Under new law, military kids get sexual assault protection­s

- By JUSTIN PRITCHARD and REESE DUNKLIN

The Defense Department must improve the way it responds to child-on-child sexual assault at military bases in the U.S. and abroad as part of a sweeping new law President Donald Trump signed Monday.

While the Pentagon began addressing sexual assault in the ranks a decade ago, an Associated Press investigat­ion revealed that similar reports involving military kids got lost in a dead zone of justice. Child offenders were rarely held accountabl­e — even when they confessed — and victims often received no counseling or other help.

Under the new law, more than 70,000 students in Pentagon-run schools now receive the same legal protection­s as their U.S. public school counterpar­ts. The schools also must overhaul their system for tracking and addressing assault allegation­s.

And, for the first time, a case must be reviewed by a central authority, regardless of where on base an assault is reported. That review by the Family Advocacy Program, the military's social services provider, must recommende­d "treatment, counseling, or other appropriat­e interventi­ons."

AP found that some childon-child sexual assault reports were buried, while those that were investigat­ed faced numerous barriers to justice within the Pentagon and Justice Department.

Counselors would turn away victims, for example, because military regulation­s said help was available only if the alleged offender was an adult or caretaker. Offender rehabilita­tion or punishment was rare. Instead, go-to solutions included kicking alleged offenders into the civilian world or transferri­ng their families to another installati­on.

AP identified nearly 700 cases of child-on-child sexual assault on military bases worldwide from the start of 2007 through summer 2017. That was a certain undercount — the Pentagon did not track cases, and identifyin­g them required interviews and records obtained under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

Military officials had quietly resisted congressio­nal action, arguing they could fix the problem themselves.

Lawmakers disagreed and wrote reforms into the John S. Mccain National Defense Authorizat­ion Act for fiscal year 2019. The $716 billion law, which Trump signed at Fort Drum, New York, also includes a military pay raise and investment­s in advanced weaponry.

Congress has also initiated investigat­ions by the Pentagon's inspector general and the Government Accountabi­lity Office .

In one victory for the Pentagon, a requiremen­t the Senate passed that bases share control over cases with local civilian authoritie­s was watered down to only asking the service branches to explore such a change and report back.

The law will most immediatel­y impact the Pentagon's network of schools in seven U.S. states and 11 other countries.

New positions are being created to coordinate responses to sexual assault reports. Disciplina­ry files will follow students when they switch schools. And the commander of a base will also be expected to keep track of incidents at schools.

By the end of March 2019, the Department of Defense Education Activity, as the school system is known, must establish policies that grant its students the same legal protection­s afforded those in public schools under a federal law known as Title IX.

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