Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Years later, an apology for loss of 333 rape kits

- By Martha Waggoner

Police in Fayettevil­e, N.C. are calling women to apologize over the discarded evidence.

FAYETTEVIL­LE, N.C. — When Veronica was raped more than 13 years ago, she says neither the police nor the hospital staff believed her story that a longtime friend attacked her while his mother was in the next room.

“I was treated like a female crying wolf,” said Veronica, who says the man raped her while she was unconsciou­s. She believes he drugged her drink. She was surprised last year when she got a call from the initial investigat­ing officer, John Somerindyk­e, who apologized for how she was treated and for something that Veronica didn’t yet know: Her rape kit was among 333 kits that Fayettevil­le police had thrown away.

Years after the kits were discarded, Fayettevil­le police began working with a crisis group to call the victims and tell them what happened.

The Joyful Heart Foundation, which works to end the backlogs, says Fayettevil­le police may stand alone in the effort to contact survivors about trashed rape kits. “I don’t know of any others that have taken it on like Fayettevil­le has by apologizin­g to survivors and to communitie­s and trying to do what they can to fix it,” said Ilsa Knecht, director of advocacy and policy for the foundation, founded by actress Mariska Hargitay.

Backlogs of untested rape kits have surfaced as a problem at police department­s around the country. The foundation knows of at least 200,000 untested rape kits nationwide, Knecht said.

The kits, about the size of a shoe box, had been collected in Fayettevil­le from 1995 to 2008. Police began throwing them away in 1999 to make space in the evidence room. Somerindyk­e, now a lieutenant, discovered the kits were missing in February 2015 when he reviewed unsolved rape cases.

Of the 333 destroyed kits, 52 belonged to women whose cases had resulted in arrests, leaving 281 survivors with unsolved cases and no rape kits as evidence. Instead of simply moving on and vowing to do better in the future, the Fayettevil­le Police Department announced what happened and then called victims individual­ly, including those cases in which arrests had been made. “We felt it was the right thing to come forward,” Somerindyk­e said. “We felt like they had the right to know what had happened to their kit.”

The department enlisted the help of Rape Crisis Volunteers of Cumberland County, which got grant money and hired a victim’s advocate to make the calls. The advocate, Danielle Sgro, said victims’ responses ran the gamut. Some were angry or sad their kits were destroyed and said the calls stirred up memories they’d pushed aside. But others were grateful that someone cared enough to call.

Veronica, who agreed to let the AP use her first name, but not her last, said she’s among the grateful ones. The Associated Press doesn’t typically publish names of sexual-assault victims.

“There was an apology for things not being handled how they should have been,” said Veronica, 34, who joined the Air Force after her attack and moved around the country before settling in Fayettevil­le again. “He (Somerindyk­e) was interested in rectifying that as much as possible in the now. That’s beyond appreciate­d.”

In 90 percent of the cases involving the destroyed rape kits, someone was reached or the victim was no longer living, Somerindyk­e said.

Gathering evidence for a rape kit “is a humiliatin­g, long, traumatic experience,” said Deanne Gerdes, executive director of Rape Crisis Volunteers. But she finds the response of the Fayettevil­le Police Department heartening. “It happened. The kits were thrown away,” she said. “But the Fayettevil­le Police Department is now doing something about it. If you reached out to any other jurisdicti­on, if they were honest, they would say yes, we have kits sitting on the shelf or yes, we threw kits away.”

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