Los Angeles Times

Bills targeting rape test kits signed

The three measures are part of efforts to tackle backlogs at law enforcemen­t agencies.

- JAZMINE ULLOA jazmine.ulloa@latimes.com

California law enforcemen­t agencies will have to preserve and count all of their untested rape kits and ensure they inform sexual assault victims of their rights under new laws signed Thursday by Gov. Jerry Brown.

The three measures are part of ongoing efforts in Sacramento to tackle rape kit backlogs at law enforcemen­t agencies and to increase the number of victims who report sexual assault and seek treatment.

They come as sexual assault is once more at the forefront of public discussion amid allegation­s against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein. New laws Brown signed last year to toughen punishment for rape followed cases against comedian Bill Cosby and former Stanford swimmer Brock Turner.

One bill by Assemblyma­n David Chiu (D-San Francisco) would require police and sheriff agencies to report the number of untested kits to a database, an attempt to keep better data on unanalyzed exams, which one advocacy nonprofit estimates number more than 13,500 statewide.

Another proposal by Assemblyma­n Evan Low (D-Campbell) will allow people to make a donation when filing their personal income taxes to help law enforcemen­t agencies test their rape kits.

A third measure, which Brown signed as part of a package of bills to address women’s and family issues, requires every police and sheriff agency to preserve untested rape kits. That bill by Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) and Assemblyma­n Marc Berman (D-Palo Alto) also will require agencies to provide a card to sexual assault victims that details their rights, including a statement that says they are not required to testify or participat­e in their abuser’s prosecutio­n.

The new law prevents officers from discouragi­ng victims from receiving a medical or physical exam to compile evidence in a case, and requires medical profession­als to provide free contracept­ion.

Sexual assault kits consist of swabs and materials to collect and preserve forensic evidence from a victim’s body in the hours after an attack.

Debate over the kits that remain untested — about 400,000 in 2015, according to a Justice Department estimate — has spurred bipartisan legislatio­n in Congress and millions in federal funding over the years to help state and local law enforcemen­t agencies track and analyze the evidence.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? AMONG the approved bills was a proposal by Assemblyma­n Evan Low, right, that will allow people to make a donation when filing their personal income taxes to help law enforcemen­t agencies test their rape kits.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press AMONG the approved bills was a proposal by Assemblyma­n Evan Low, right, that will allow people to make a donation when filing their personal income taxes to help law enforcemen­t agencies test their rape kits.

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