Santa Cruz Sentinel

US Army crowdsourc­es ideas to combat sexual assault crisis

- By Sarah Blake Morgan

Sgt. Taylor Knueven always knew sexual assault and harassment plagued the U.S. Army. But the combat medic’s own assault early last year opened her eyes to the broken system surroundin­g one of the military’s most infamous problems.

Earlier this week, Knueven and six other soldiers went before a panel in the 18th Airborne Corps headquarte­rs at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, to present ideas on how the Army can revamp the way it deals with sexual assault and harassment.

The Army’s Sexual Harassment/Assault Response and Prevention Program, also known as SHARP, has been the subject of much scrutiny, especially following the slaying of Spc. Vanessa Guillen by a fellow soldier inside a Fort Hood, Texas, armory last April. The proposal Knueven presented to the panel Monday would address gender and military bias by reworking the compositio­n of offender separation boards. She said her attacker went before a board consisting of three men and no women.

Knueven described in detail events on the night she says she was assaulted by a fellow soldier at a concert. And she recounted how she felt about reporting the incident and what went through her mind when she said she learned he would remain in the Army and ultimately face little punishment.

“I thought it was a total slap in the face to myself,” Knueven said.

Last week, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said at his first Pentagon news conference that reducing sexual assault is one of his top priorities and that he would introduce stronger efforts to fight it. “We have been working at this for a long time in earnest, but we haven’t gotten it right,” he said.

Staff Sgt. Shameka Dudley wants to see stale SHARP training PowerPoint­s replaced with virtual reality scenarios that would offer soldiers a glimpse at assault and harassment scenarios through the eyes of survivors, aggressors and bystanders.

“We have this same training and it’s really not changing much,” Dudley said. “The numbers are still going up.”

The 28-year-old mother of five handed out virtual reality glasses to the panel as she recounted the success she’s seen the method play in the treatment of veterans struggling with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. For her, it’s about understand­ing and empathy. “The majority of people learn from doing, from seeing, from being able to be there,” Dudley said. Dudley says soldiers who have experience­d sexual trauma can opt out of the training as it may serve as a trigger.

 ?? SGT. MARYGIAN D. BARNES — U.S. ARMY ?? Sgt. Taylor Knueven pitches an idea to better the U.S. Army’s Sexual Harassment and Assault and Prevention Program to a panel at Fort Bragg, N.C. Knueven shared her own story of assault during the “Dragon’s Lair” panel. The 18th Airborne Corps says it plans to implement parts of all seven pitches heard at the presentati­on.
SGT. MARYGIAN D. BARNES — U.S. ARMY Sgt. Taylor Knueven pitches an idea to better the U.S. Army’s Sexual Harassment and Assault and Prevention Program to a panel at Fort Bragg, N.C. Knueven shared her own story of assault during the “Dragon’s Lair” panel. The 18th Airborne Corps says it plans to implement parts of all seven pitches heard at the presentati­on.

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