The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

DIY rape kits raise concerns for Conn. AG

- By Christine Stuart CTNEWSJUNK­IE.COM

HARTFORD, CT — Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong is calling on two doityourse­lf rape kit companies to tell him whether they comply with Connecticu­t’s rape kit standards.

Tong sent letters to MeToo Kits in Brooklyn, N.Y., and The Preserve Group in New Jersey asking the companies for more informatio­n about why they believe their products comply with Connecticu­t laws and whether they are being properly marketed. The two

companies have been targeted by other attorneys generals.

Earlier this year, New York Attorney General Letitia James and Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter sent cease and desist orders to the same companies.

In the case of the MeToo Kits, the company was still in the developmen­t phase and not yet selling its kits. The PRESERVEki­t, which was previously being sold on Amazon, is no longer available for purchase. The company posted a message on its website saying “we will not be selling this product while we review the legal concerns.”

Jane Mason, the retired FBI special agent who co

founded PRESERVEki­t, said in a Sept. 15 letter posted on the website that not one person has asked her about why she believes the evidence collected with the kit would be admissible in court.

“Because of cease and desist letters, untruths all over the media and in press conference­s, and the hostile and threatenin­g atmosphere this has created, we regret to say we are removing most of the informatio­n from our website,” Mason wrote. “We will be back as soon as possible because we are going to continue to help the 77%.”

Mason has said she created the kits because 77% of survivors never report their sexual assault or have a medical exam.

Mason was not immediatel­y available for comment Thursday.

MeToo Kits said in a statement that it believes survivors have the right to collect evidence of their assault, independen­t from the traditiona­l legal and health systems.

The company said that “no rape kit—not even the government one—is automatica­lly admissible in court. A judge determines admissibil­ity in each instance, based on the underlying evidence.”

Tong said these kits might provide a false sense of security for sexual assault providers about the evidence they are collecting. They also limit the access survivors may have to services and medicine.

Asia Nhatavong, a justice coordinato­r at the Connecticu­t Alliance to End Sexual Violence, said these companies have expressed their intent to help survivors but

“intent is not always enough and intent is not impact.”

Nhatavong said the kits don’t help a survivor during their journey through the process evidence collection­s or the benefits of certified profession­als.

She said Connecticu­t’s rape kit is a 12 step kit includes emergency contracept­ion, medication to help a survivor from contractin­g HIV and medication­s that can prevent the three most common sexually transmitte­d infections. She said she doesn’t believe any of that is included in the DIY kits.

“Additional­ly, trained advocates can provide support and guidance in multiple areas like trauma informed care, crisis deescalati­on, ground techniques, safety planning and that is not something you can get at home doing this on your own,” Nhatavong said.

 ?? Christine Stuart / CTNewsJunk­ie.com ?? Attorney General William Tong holds up a Connecticu­t rape kit.
Christine Stuart / CTNewsJunk­ie.com Attorney General William Tong holds up a Connecticu­t rape kit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States