2016
DOI: 10.1177/0886260516681881
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Justice Denied: Low Submission Rates of Sexual Assault Kits and the Predicting Variables

Abstract: Following sexual assaults, victims are advised to seek health care services with forensic evidence collected and packaged in sexual assault kits (SAKs). This large ( N = 1,874), retrospective study examined rates of SAK submissions by law enforcement to the state crime laboratory for analysis from 2010 to 2013 at four sites in a Western state in the United States with established sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE) programs. Variables of legal and extralegal characteristics in sexual assault cases were explor… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…SAKs (i.e., “rape kits”) are often collected as a component of the forensic examination by a medical professional, ideally by a trained sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE). During the medical exam, SANEs document injuries and collect a narrative of the assault from the survivor to guide the collection of forensic evidence (Corum & Carroll, 2014; Valentine et al, 2019). Forensic examinations are intrusive, as the process lasts at a minimum of several hours and involves invasive procedures such as photographic documentation of injuries; hair samples obtained by plucking/pulling; body sample swabs, including oral, vaginal, or anal swabbing; and fingernail scrapings (R.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…SAKs (i.e., “rape kits”) are often collected as a component of the forensic examination by a medical professional, ideally by a trained sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE). During the medical exam, SANEs document injuries and collect a narrative of the assault from the survivor to guide the collection of forensic evidence (Corum & Carroll, 2014; Valentine et al, 2019). Forensic examinations are intrusive, as the process lasts at a minimum of several hours and involves invasive procedures such as photographic documentation of injuries; hair samples obtained by plucking/pulling; body sample swabs, including oral, vaginal, or anal swabbing; and fingernail scrapings (R.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, a culture of victim-blaming and the discreditation of sexual assault cases may be functional for an overwhelmed system in need of ways to fast-track cases or remove them altogether from the conveyer belt. Although it cannot be assumed that the culture of victim-blaming is ubiquitous across law enforcement agencies, it could perhaps help to explain why the likelihood of some SAKs being submitted for testing is significantly lower in some jurisdictions than others (see Valentine et al, 2019).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Indeed, studies show that a range of case characteristics, if present, can undermine investigators’ perceptions that the survivor is a “real” victim or that testing the SAK would be beneficial, and in consequence these SAKs are less likely to be submitted for testing (see also Sleath & Bull [27]). These include the victim admitting to being intoxicated before the assault, a lack of obvious physical injuries as a result of the attack, and the victim bathing after the assault (1,2,6,11,22,28–32).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The struggles of many jurisdictions in tracking, submitting, and testing their sexual assault kits (SAKs) have been widely acknowledged in the past decade (1–11). The accumulation of SAKs in police evidence property rooms (“unsubmitted SAKs,” those never submitted to a crime laboratory for testing) and in crime laboratories (“untested SAKs,” those submitted to a crime laboratory but that have not been tested) can be understood largely as a function of one of two persistent bottlenecks in the criminal justice system (9,12,13).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%