% IssueDate = "08/01/02" IssueCategory = "Events" %>
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in Congress is a Positive Step But More is Needed to Protect Current Victims, says ACLU Comprehensive Effort for Prison Rape Reform is Required American Civil Liberties Union
![]() "The American Civil Liberties Union is thankful that members of Congress recognize the overwhelming pain victims of prison rape experience, but the solution for ending their suffering must be a comprehensive effort for reform," said Rachel King, an ACLU Legislative Counsel. "While the legislation may some day significantly reduce rapes, it does little for the current victims of this epidemic. Congress should allow these victims full access to redress in the courts." The legislation, called the Prison Rape Reduction Act of 2002 (S 2619), would establish a commission to study the harmful effects of prison rape and examine its prevalence in America's correctional facilities.
The ACLU cited the case of Roderick Johnson as an illustration of the dangers of the exhaustion requirement. Mr. Johnson was raped and assaulted nearly every day for 18 months by Texas prison gangs. During that time he filed many complaints and exhausted the prison's grievance process. Administrators were only persuaded to take his claim seriously and move him to safety after he filed a lawsuit against the facility itself. For a year-and-a-half he endured repeated gang rapes, because of the misguided and dangerous exhaustion provision in current law. |
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