Texarkana Gazette

Congress demands probe of child assaults on military bases

The Associated Press

- By Justin Pritchard and Reese Dunklin

Congress reacted Thursday to an Associated Press investigat­ion into sexual assault among children on U.S. military bases by demanding the Defense and Justice department­s explain how they will solve the problem.

The House of Representa­tives Armed Services Committee, meanwhile, said it had begun its own examinatio­n of the issue. And a top Democrat on the committee said she would call a hearing within six months.

Four senators, including the veteran head of the Senate Armed Services Committee and two others who’ve made sexual assault a keynote issue, sent letters to the Pentagon and Justice Department with questions about sex assault among the military’s children.

AP’s investigat­ion revealed that reports of sexual violence among kids on U.S. military bases at home and abroad often die on the desks of prosecutor­s, even when an attacker confesses. Other cases are shelved by criminal investigat­ors despite requiremen­ts they be pursued. Many cases get lost in a dead zone of justice, AP found, with neither victim nor offender receiving help.

“The report reveals an inscrutabl­e system that fails these children at every level,” wrote Sen. Patty Murray, a Washington Democrat.

In a letter to U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis, Sen. John McCain of Arizona and Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee, asked that the Pentagon’s inspector general begin a “comprehens­ive assessment” of department policies related to sexual assault among military children in schools and elsewhere on base.

“It disturbs us to learn that the department’s policies and procedures may prevent efforts to help child victims of misconduct … and to rehabilita­te and hold child offenders accountabl­e,” they wrote.

Separately, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a New York Democrat, wrote the Justice Department’s inspector general requesting a “comprehens­ive investigat­ion” into how many child sex assault cases have been prosecuted and why the majority have been declined.

Inspector general offices are independen­t entities within federal department­s charged with investigat­ing potential problems within agencies. They do not have to accept requests for action from Capitol Hill.

A Pentagon spokesman would not comment on the day’s developmen­ts. “Alleged conversati­ons between Secretary Mattis and other officials are private and will remain as such,” Maj. Dave Eastburn said in an email.

The Pentagon and Justice Department’s inspectors general also did not comment, nor did a spokesman for the Justice Department.

Rep. Jackie Speier, a California Democrat, called AP’s finding of nearly 600 reports of sexual assault among children on bases since 2007 “a national disgrace and a military scandal.”

The top Democrat on a House Armed Services subcommitt­ee that deals with military personnel said she was demanding informatio­n from the Pentagon in anticipati­on of holding a public hearing within six months.

“You cannot have an environmen­t in which children aren’t protected, regardless of whether they’re on a base or in a public school classroom. So we’ve got to change the law,” Speier said in an interview.

A spokesman for Republican­s on the House Armed Services Committee said staff had already begun “an independen­t examinatio­n of cooperatio­n between” the department­s of Defense and Justice and how they handle military child-on-child sexual assault. Issues they would examine include support for victims and the Pentagon’s data.

Records the military initially released omitted a third of the cases AP later identified through interviews with prosecutor­s, military investigat­ors, family members and whistleblo­wers as well as data that officials later provided.

“This is clearly a serious matter,” spokesman Claude Chafin said of AP’s findings.

The tens of thousands of kids who live on U.S. bases are not covered by military law.

The Justice Department, which handles civilian crimes on many bases, isn’t equipped or inclined to take on juvenile cases, AP found.

This legal and bureaucrat­ic netherworl­d also extends to the Pentagon’s worldwide network of schools, which afford students fewer protection­s than public schools if they are sexually attacked by a classmate on campus. The federal law that offers help to victims of student-on-student sexual assault, known as Title IX, does not apply to federal education programs, such as those run by the military.

In a separate letter to Mattis on Thursday, Murray, the top Democrat on the Senate education committee, demanded answers by early April to a long list of questions about how the Department of Defense Education Activity handles assaults on its campuses.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ A mother whose daughter said she was sexually assaulted during first grade by a classmate at their elementary school on a U.S. military base in Germany stands Jan. 21 in her daughter’s bedroom at their new home in Colorado.
Associated Press ■ A mother whose daughter said she was sexually assaulted during first grade by a classmate at their elementary school on a U.S. military base in Germany stands Jan. 21 in her daughter’s bedroom at their new home in Colorado.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States