February 11, 2009 5:10 PM

Sexual Assault Reports Jump In Military

(AP)  Reports of sexual assaults in the military increased by about 24 percent last year, and more than twice as many offenders were punished.

There were nearly 3,000 sexual assault reports filed in 2006, compared with about 2,400 the previous year, a Pentagon report said Wednesday. Action was taken against 780 people, from courts-martial and discharges to other administrative remedies.

The cases involved members of the military who were victims or accused of the assaults. The military counts rape, nonconsensual sodomy, indecent assault and attempts to commit any of those as sexual assault, though the 17-page report contained no data on how many of each were reported.

This is the third year the military has compiled these sexual assault statistics. The reporting methods have changed each year, however, making comparisons of the annual reports difficult.

Of the 2,947 sexual assaults reported last year, 756 were initially filed under a program that allows victims to report the incident and receive health care or counseling services but does not notify law enforcement or commanders.

The restricted, confidential reporting program allows the victims to consider pursuing an investigation later; that was done in 86 of the 756 cases last year. Data for 2005 included only the restricted cases for half the year.

According to the new report, more than 1,400 investigations into sex assault cases dating to 2004 were completed last year. In slightly more than half, commanders took no action, most often because the charges were not substantiated or lacked evidence.

When action was taken, more than one-third — or 292 individuals — were court-martialed. An additional 243 received nonjudicial punishment and 245 either were discharged or received some other administrative action. Nonjudicial punishments can include reprimand letters or demotions.

Pentagon officials have said that sexual assaults often go unreported. They have attributed the rise in number in part to the vigorous effort to encourage victims to report the crime.

"We expected those efforts, as well as increased training and improved victim services, would prompt many more victims to come forward, and we expected the numbers to increase this year," Pentagon spokeswoman Cynthia Smith said.

Others said that reporting changes and training are not likely the only reasons for the higher numbers.

"Those conclusion are a little too fast and too easy," said Anita Sanchez, spokeswoman for the Miles Foundation, a private, nonprofit organization that provides services to victims of violence associated with the military. "There are more women serving and more women deployed, including Guard and Reserve members. Historically we have seen an increase in incidents of sexual assault during deployments."

The report provided a breakdown of some of the assaults, saying that 756 of the victims were members of the military. Of those, 285 were Army soldiers, 247 were in the Air Force, 144 were in the Navy, 48 were Marines and one was in the Coast Guard.

Army spokeswoman Maj. Cheryl Phillips said, "There is no evidence that the actual number of assaults is increasing in the Army, but there are definite indicators that the Army has created more willingness among Soldier victims to report incidents."

In the report, the Defense Department said the military services "placed a high priority on training" and that the 2006 report demonstrates the Pentagon's "commitment to eliminating sexual assault from the military services" through education and by removing barriers that can dissuade victims from reporting the crime.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by theusa1st March 22, 2007 3:14 PM EDT
zootallures2,

Re: "Well, seeing that 9/11 was an attack on ourselves, may as well rape our own women for it."

Good point.

Who would Jesus rape?
Posted by feelfree1 at 12:22 AM : Mar 22, 2007

Idiots.....
Reply to this comment
by ralan40 March 22, 2007 2:30 PM EDT
..the military is obviously proving that they tolerate sexual assaults..as long as they are involving different genders (only 250 people court marshaled?) They can't have it both ways (pardon the pun)
Reply to this comment
by ralan40 March 22, 2007 2:30 PM EDT
..the military is obviously proving that they tolerate sexual assaults..as long as they are involving different genders (only 250 people court marshaled?) They can't have it both ways (pardon the pun)
Reply to this comment
by ralan40 March 22, 2007 2:26 PM EDT
...and yet the military bans g@ys for this very reason. Oh the leaders can decry h0m0 behavior as "imoral" (and war is moral??) If G@ys are banned because of possible s3xual assault cases, then logic dictates that women should be banned as well, right?
Reply to this comment
by March 22, 2007 6:04 AM EDT
Gee, with the military finding it necessary to lower it's recruiting standards, how on earth could this be happening?
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by randalds March 22, 2007 5:42 AM EDT
I don't understand where all of these sexual assaults are coming from? What kind of men are they allowing into the service these days? Yes I know there has always been a relatively small problem with this, but I can remember when in 1973 a WAF (yes they were still called that back then) in basic training was raped and they had to confine most of the other basic training units to quarters because we wanted to hunt the bas***** down ourselves. Where is the honor? What ever happened to teaching men to be crude SOB's when with other guys, but always respecting women when with them?
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 March 22, 2007 3:22 AM EDT
zootallures2,

Re: "Well, seeing that 9/11 was an attack on ourselves, may as well rape our own women for it."

Good point.

Who would Jesus rape?
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 March 22, 2007 3:14 AM EDT
A 2003 study of U.S. military women revealed that "79 percent of participants reported experiences of sexual harassment during their military service" and that "30 percent of the women reported an attempted or completed rape".

www.news-releases.uiowa.edu/2003/march/031103military-rape.html

This problem is widespread and rampant, and commanders frequently fail to take any action against the perpatrators. On the contrary, it is often the victims who are retaliated against, if they attempt to report these attacks.

Male soldiers also report being victims of sexual assaults by other male soldiers, but not at nearly as high of a rate as the women.

If this report is correct, and the rate of sexual assaults is up another 24% from the already astounding figures, this is a major disgrace, and the leaders responsible for allowing this should be brought to account.
Reply to this comment
by zootallures2 March 22, 2007 2:24 AM EDT
Well, seeing that 9/11 was an attack on ourselves, may as well rape our own women for it.
Reply to this comment
by scott4261 March 22, 2007 2:15 AM EDT
"might" should be "night." Spell check didn't catch it.
Reply to this comment
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