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1,700 sexual assault cases filed with military
Associated Press
Published May 7, 2005
WASHINGTON - Military criminal investigators received 1,700 reports of sexual assault in 2004 involving at least one member of the military, the Pentagon said Friday.
This includes cases in which a service member was either an alleged assailant or a victim. It is the first year the military has tracked this particular statistic, a move resulting from sexual assault scandals at the Air Force Academy and among deployed troops overseas.
But one part of this number that has been tracked in the past - the number of military members claiming they were victims of assault - showed a marked increase over previous years.
In 2004, 1,275 cases involved at least one member of the military saying he or she was a victim of sexual assault. That's up from 1,012 in 2003 and 901 in 2002.
A military spokesman attributed the increase to increased awareness in the military about sexual assault issues, so service members feel more comfortable coming forward to report the crime.
"We have focused our efforts trying to encourage service members to come forward," Lt. Col. Joe Richard said. "The environment has changed."
These assaults took place in a population of 1.5-million active duty and mobilized National Guard and reserve personnel.
The report shows "that there is an ongoing problem of sexual assault within the military," said Anita Sanchez, spokeswoman for the Miles Foundation advocacy group for victims of military violence.
The military defines sexual assault in this context as attempted or actual rape, nonconsensual sodomy, and indecent assault, a category that includes unwanted sexual touching.
Investigations and adjudication of the cases of 1,022 alleged assailants were completed. Other cases were still open at the end of 2004, the end of the period that the report covers.
Of those closed:
351 were not substantiated by investigation or were closed due to insufficient evidence.
342 led to punitive action in the military justice system, including 113 courts-martial. The remaining cases involved less serious adjudication.
51 were in civilian or foreign courts.
In the rest, the assailant was not identified and the case was closed. The vast majority of cases involved a man allegedly assaulting a woman.
Sanchez said the Miles Foundation is concerned that "the adjudication ... continues to be predominantly nonjudicial punishment" even though sexual assault is a crime.
[Last modified May 7, 2005, 01:03:04]
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