The Columbus Dispatch

Abbott: Texas will ‘eliminate rapists’

New abortion law doesn’t include usual exceptions

- Madlin Mekelburg

AUSTIN, Texas – Gov. Greg Abbott, responding to a question about how Texas’ new abortion law would impact victims of rape and incest, said the state will employ aggressive tactics to “eliminate all rapists from the streets of Texas.”

The law, which took effect last week, bans most abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. It does not include exceptions for victims of rape or incest, a caveat often included in abortion restrictio­ns.

“Rape is a crime, and Texas will work tirelessly to make sure that we eliminate all rapists from the streets of Texas by aggressive­ly going out and arresting them and prosecutin­g them and getting them off the streets,” Abbott said Tuesday, responding to a question from a reporter after he signed the divisive GOP elections bill into law.

Abbott said the law does not force victims of rape or incest to carry a pregnancy to term, but rather “provides at least six weeks for a person to be able to get an abortion.”

Abbott faced immediate blowback for his comments, including from one of his Republican challenger­s who said it was “disgusting” to see Abbott “advocating for women to get abortions.”

“The pro-life response should always be to acknowledg­e the human value of all unborn children, and today (Abbott) fell short of that very clear standard,” the challenger, former state Sen. Don Huffines, said in a statement.

But the bulk of criticism came from opponents of the ban, who said Abbott’s promise was not rooted in reality and he hasn’t shown that the issue is a priority.

“NEWSFLASH: Rape has been a crime in TX and it still hasn’t been eliminated,” state Rep. Jasmine Crockett, Ddallas, said in a tweet. “There is no magic wand to eliminate any crime!”

U.S. Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, D-houston, told MSNBC on Tuesday that she would “love to see Texas address violence

against women,” but that the abortion legislatio­n doesn’t address it.

“It’s kind of this magical thinking that’s typical of his approach to governing, that he’ll give an answer that is really untethered to the reality of what he’s doing,” she said. “We know that Texas, unfortunat­ely, has not been making this its top priority.”

In 2019, sexual assaults reported in the state occurred most frequently in homes and a majority of victims were known to the offender before the assault, according to the latest available data from the Texas Department of Public Safety.

That same year, there were 14,656 rapes and attempted rapes reported across the state, resulting in 2,210 arrests.

But studies show that the majority of rape victims rarely report the crime to authoritie­s. In Texas, an estimated 9.2% of victims report sexual violence to law enforcemen­t, according to a 2015 study from the University of Texas’ Institute on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault.

“People who experience sexual assault do not report to law enforcemen­t for a variety of reasons,” said Noël Busch-armendariz, director of the institute. “Trauma and the impact of immediate trauma and post trauma play a big role in reporting or a decision to not report.”

Even when victims do report rape to the authoritie­s, there can be delays in processing evidence. Texas has long struggled to confront its backlog of untested rape kits, evidence collected during a sexual assault forensic exam that could include DNA used to identify an offender.

In 2017, the state had 18,955 backlogged kits that had yet to be tested, and Abbott said reducing the backlog would be a priority for his administra­tion. In the years since, the state has spent millions of dollars on testing these kits and adopted new requiremen­ts aimed at improving oversight and ensuring new kits were being tested at the same time as law enforcemen­t tackled the backlog.

Of the 2017 backlog, 2,138 kits have yet to be tested, according to End The Backlog, a national nonprofit that advocates for states to adopt certain reforms to reduce backlogs of untested kits.

The organizati­on said Texas was the first state in the country to adopt all six of their recommende­d reforms, which include: annual inventorie­s of untested kits; a commitment to testing backlogged kits and testing new kits immediatel­y; giving victims access to informatio­n about the status of their kit; establishi­ng a system for tracking kits; and funding the reforms.

Abbott’s office did not return a request for informatio­n about how he planned to carry out his promise to “eliminate all rapists.”

“Maybe Governor Abbott should have eliminated rape and incest BEFORE passing an abortion law that didn’t have an exception for rape and incest?” state Rep. Gene Wu, D-houston, said in a tweet Wednesday.

He followed that tweet with another: “Just a reminder — (Texas Republican­s): PASSED a law putting a $10,000 bounty on people who help victims of rape with an abortion. DID NOT put a $10,000 bounty on RAPISTS.”

Texas’ abortion law does not allow public officials to enforce the ban and instead allows any private individual to sue abortion providers, staff at clinics or someone who drives a patient to receive their procedure – anyone who could be seen as aiding and abetting an abortion in violation of the law.

If these private individual­s are successful in a lawsuit, they can collect at least $10,000 in damages from the defendant, plus a reimbursem­ent of legal fees.

The Biden administra­tion also criticized Abbott for his remarks.

“If Gov. Abbott has a means of eliminatin­g all rapists or all rape from the United States, then there would be bipartisan support for that,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

Some Republican­s came to the bill’s defense Wednesday, including state Rep. Matt Schaefer, R-tyler. He responded to Crockett’s tweet and said: “Is it humane to kill an innocent person because of the violent crime of another person?”

 ?? JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? University of Texas students march from campus to the Capitol in Austin on Tuesday to protest the new abortion law.
JAY JANNER/AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN University of Texas students march from campus to the Capitol in Austin on Tuesday to protest the new abortion law.

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