Rome News-Tribune

Military eyes child sex-assault solution without Congress

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are getting lost in a dead zone of justice that often leaves both victim and offender without help.

With at least three potential legislativ­e fixes being drafted, military officials have had a clear message during briefings with lawmakers and their staffs: We can handle this on our own. It’s a strategy that began months ago, after the Pentagon received AP’s questions and well before officials understood the scope or severity of the problem.

In March, AP documented nearly 600 sex assault cases among children and teens on U.S. bases worldwide over a 10-year period. Army criminal investigat­ors have now added another 86 investigat­ions to the 223 they initially disclosed. The revision came after AP challenged data that suggested major installati­ons in several states and overseas had no or only a few such sexual assault cases.

One Texas congressma­n has filed legislatio­n that would direct the Pentagon to transfer cases to state authoritie­s, who unlike the military or federal prosecutor­s have much more experience handling juvenile offenders. At least two Senate offices are drafting legislativ­e language to address the problems that AP’s reporting revealed.

In response, officials from the service branches and the Pentagon school system lobbied for time to fix the problem themselves, according to interviews and records.

School system officials have told AP they were developing new rules for responding to the sexual violence. The Defense Department promised more broadly to take “appropriat­e actions” to help juveniles involved in sex assaults.

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