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Powerless in Prison: Sexual Abuse Against Incarcerated Women

By Nicole Summer, RH Reality Check. Posted January 15, 2008.


For women in prison, sexual assault and inadequate reproductive health care are facts of life.
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"I am 7 months pregnant [and] I got pregnant here during a sexual assault. I have been sexually assaulted here numerous times! The jailers here are the ones doing it!"

-- excerpt from a letter from an inmate in a jail in Alabama to Stop Prisoner Rape.



Surviving a sexual assault and then navigating the health care system to receive adequate counseling and reproductive medical attention is daunting enough for those who walk freely on the outside. For women in prison, these hurdles can seem insurmountable. Unfortunately, sexual assault, particularly guard-on-prisoner sexual assault, is a fact of life for many incarcerated women, and the ensuing implications for their reproductive health are many.

The power dynamics in prison severely disadvantage the prisoner, who is at the absolute mercy of her guards and correctional officers, relying on them for necessities such as food and for the small privileges and luxuries such as cigarettes. Guards have unlimited access to prisoners and their living environment, including where they sleep and where they bathe. With such an imbalance of power, the likelihood of sexual assault increases. Sexual abuse in prison can range from forcible rape to the trading of sex for certain privileges. While the latter may seem consensual to some, the drastic power disparity makes the idea of "consent" almost laughable. In fact, all 50 states have laws that make any sexual contact between inmates and correctional officers illegal, "consensual" or not. "It's always unacceptable and illegal," says Lovisa Stannow, executive director of Stop Prisoner Rape.

While guard-on-prisoner sexual assault is common, putting a number on the instances is difficult because so many assaults are unreported. As with sexual assault on the outside, many survivors in prison are ashamed and embarrassed to come forward, fear that their claim will be hard to prove or fear that their attackers will retaliate. In prison the fear of retaliation is heightened, as the prisoner continues to live with her attacker controlling her daily life. And inmates who report a sexual assault are frequently put in segregated isolation, ostensibly to protect them from retaliation, but this isolation can be emotionally and physically draining, and well, terribly isolating. And many women in prison have been sexually abused in the past, before they were incarcerated, or are accustomed to using sex to get what they want, on the inside or the outside. "A lot of women don't view it as abuse," says Deborah Golden, staff attorney at the D.C. Prisoners' Project of the Washington Lawers' Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs. About 80 percent of women inmates have already experienced some kind of sexual or physical abuse before prison, says Sarah From, director of public policy and communications at the Women's Prison Association.

Despite the widespread underreporting, some statistics exist. First, there are about 200,000 women incarcerated in the U.S. (in federal, state, local and immigration detention settings), a number that is growing exponentially and that makes up about 10 percent of the total prison population. Amnesty International reports that in 2004, a total of 2,298 allegations of staff sexual misconduct against both male and female inmates were made, and more than half of these cases involved women as victims, a much higher percentage than the 10 percent that women comprise of the total prison population. It can vary from institution to institution, but in the worst prison facilities, one in four female inmates are sexually abused in prison, says Stannow.

The risk of pregnancy as the result of a sexual assault is, of course, a concern for many survivors, incarcerated or not. But obtaining emergency contraception or an abortion, if one is desired, may be more difficult for women on the inside. Because many inmates do not report the sexual assault immediately (if at all), using emergency contraceptionis usually not possible, if it is even available. While prisoners' rights and reproductive rights organizations report hearing few complaints about emergency contraception being inaccessible to women in prison, they are unconvinced that it is widely available. Golden believes emergency contraception should be made readily available and should be on the prison's prescription formulary.

Unlike access to emergency contraception, access to abortion by inmates has seen its way through the courts. Crucially, women do not lose their right to decide to have an abortion just because they are in prison; rather, the issue is how the prison accommodates (or refuses to accommodate) her decision. "There are constitutional minimums," says Diana Kasdan, staff attorney with the ACLU's Reproductive Freedom Project. Although the details can vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, prisons must provide access to an abortion if one is desired. "Providing access" can range from providing transportation to an off-site medical facility, to allowing for a furlough or to providing abortions on-site, although Kasdan says she has not heard of the latter. A court in Arizona recently ruled that a court order to obtain transportation for an abortion cannot be required, and a federal court in Missouri ruled last year that a prison cannot refuse to pay for the transportation of inmates to receive abortions.

Paying for the abortion itself is yet another issue for women inmates, and it is a patchwork quilt of inconsistency throughout the states. Some state prison systems fund abortions, some states refuse to pay for what they consider "elective" abortions and some states simply have no official written policy, research by Rachel Roth has shown. Only two states specifically mention sexual assault in their prison abortion policies; both Minnesota and Wisconsin allow for government-subsidized abortions when the pregnancy results from a sexual assault. The federal Bureau of Prisons also pays for the abortion in the case of sexual assault.

In prison, the possibility of a coerced abortion can hang over an inmate who discovers she is pregnant as the result of a sexual assault by a guard. In a letter to Stop Prisoner Rape, one inmate writes:

A rumor had spread through the facility that I was pregnant. I'm not sure how the rumor got started, but medical staff came to my cell and forced me to provide a urine sample that they could use to test for pregnancy. They did not ask me any questions, offer me any support, or seem at all concerned for my well-being. That same night, three guards, two female and one male, came into my cell, sprayed me in the face with mace, handcuffed me behind my back, threw me down on the ground, and said, "We hear you are pregnant by one of ours and we're gonna make sure you abort." The two female guards began to kick me as the male guard stood watch. The beating lasted about a minute, but it felt like ten or more. Afterwards, the male officer uncuffed me and they left.




The prisoner's rights as a mother, if she becomes pregnant and chooses not to terminate the pregnancy, are complicated, to say the least. Few jurisdictions allow women to keep their children in prison with them once they are born. Frequently, if there is no family member on the outside to take the child, the child will enter the foster care system, and the state will move to terminate the parental rights of the mother because she is absent. The parental rights of mothers in prison is a fraught and complicated issue, one that goes well beyond the particular problem of sexual assault by guards.

Access to counseling after a sexual assault in prison is virtually nonexistent. An inmate cannot simply call a hotline, since all calls are monitored and she has no privacy. When one inmate sought mental health care from prison services after a sexual assault, she was offered sleeping pills, says Golden. "There's no capacity in prisons for talk therapy," she says. And any counseling inside the prison is not confidential. Some community therapists will come in on visiting days to counsel an inmate, but usually only at the behest of a lawyer, says Golden.

Despite the overwhelming power imbalance, guard-on-prisoner sexual assault is preventable, insists Stannow. Efforts such as making sure the staff is well trained, educating the prisoners about their rights, eliminating impunity for guards and following up on reports of sexual abuse would go a long way toward prevention, she says. Congress had similar goals in mind when it unanimously passed the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) in 2003. PREA aims to establish zero-tolerance standards of sexual assaults, to increase data and information on the occurrence of prison sexual assault and to develop and implement national standards for the detection, prevention, reduction and punishment of prison sexual assault. "PREA has been enormously important in ending sexual violence in detention," said Stannow. "Congress made clear that it's a problem that must be addressed." Perhaps most excitingly, PREA created a federal commission to generate binding national standards regarding sexual violence in detention. But "the existence of the law doesn't mean the problem is gone," Stannow continues. "Now we need to make sure that we build on the momentum of the law to make every corrections system in the country acknowledge that sexual violence in detention is a major problem, and does everything it can to end it."

One of the largest obstacles to eliminating prison sexual assault is the "social invisibility" of prisons. The general public neither knows nor cares about the plight of the incarcerated, and thus cannot demand that its government properly protect prisoners' bodily integrity and rights. Perhaps PREA is the beginning of the end of this social invisibility.

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See more stories tagged with: pro-choice, pregnancy, prison, reproductive justice

Nicole Summer is a writer and lawyer living in New York City.

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Require DNA from all COs
Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Jan 17, 2008 6:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If a DNA sample were required of every state corrections officer as a condition of employment we would have a valuable tool in correcting this and perhaps other problems. If it is clear that it is always illegal for guards to have sex with inmates, then it would be as certain as statuary charges against adults who have sex with minors. It would require also that the medical staff report and take evidence for each inmate claim.

As soon as one inmate turns up pregnant and claims she was refused any serious consideration, we could shake the whole thing up - if that were what our fiefdom of corrections wanted.

More likely though, they prefer to think of themselves as top predators and view their captives as ligitimate prey - fish in a barrel, as it were. They know this when they consider seeking such an employment opportunity. How theraputic it must seem for the frustrated assholes of the world to have such release always available.

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mdiehl
Posted by: mdiehl on Jan 17, 2008 9:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While impregnated by a man, note that one of the women was beaten by FEMALE guards.

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This is a discusting society.
Posted by: douglashoyt on Jan 17, 2008 6:21 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This would not happen if the culture did not condone this cruelty.

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» Whose Culture??? Posted by: gellero
Its a fact of drug prohibition
Posted by: wishninja on Jan 17, 2008 6:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Prisons are over stressed and unregulated. The War on Drugs and drug prohibition have most of the women in prison. 80% of women in prison are there for non-violent offenses. America is sick with this prohibition we need an end to prohibition now.

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They're just a bunch of criminals, right?
Posted by: SjrBoomz on Jan 18, 2008 10:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The biggest problem with prison rape - whatever the gender of the victim and/or perp - is that the victim is a prisoner, which connotes to the rest of society that they are a bad person... cuz.. ya know.. all prisoners are inherently bad people.. that's why they're in jail. Who cares that the vast majority of prisoners are incarcerated for non-violent crimes. Never mind that some have been incarcerated for crimes they did not commit. Never mind that many prisoners have grown up in hostile community environments in which survival of the fittest was the rule and led them to a life of criminal behaviour that is structurally reinforced. Who cares. They're only prisoners....

We need to convince people that prisoners are people. They have good sides, they have bad sides. They've fucked up once or twice, maybe many more times.. but they're human. They just happened to get caught. Present me with 50 regular working class people who have never once committed any crime at all and I will then believe that all criminals are bad people. Until then, I accept the fact that they are regular people who made a bad mistake and got caught. They need help, not hurt.

What really killed me in this article was the mention that counseling is not readily available to prisoners who have been sexually assualted. What the hell kind of world are we living in? ALL prisoners should have access to counseling and rehabilitative programs, let alone those who have been raped while in prison...

There are far more reforms that need to be made to current prison conditions than there are aspects that ought to remain the same. That is a sad story America.. and Canada's just as bad.........

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DOSTOYEVSKY SAID THAT YOU COULD JUDGE A CULTURE BY
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Jan 19, 2008 1:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the state of its prisons. I guess we all know where that puts us. When a rent-aprison goes empty, do the owners lobby the legislature to fill it? It must be. We are only one in nineteen in the world, but we have nearly one in four of the world's incarcerated here in the United States. I looks like the lobbying is working.

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As I understand it, in NY
Posted by: bitsfick on Jan 20, 2008 5:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
sex between guards and inmates is considered rape, but the county the prison is located is obligated to prosecute, not the state. Most prisons are located in very poor countys, so the cost of a trial, along with the attitude towards inmates means very few rapes are prosecuted. And the guards know it.

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Horrible Situation - Made Worse
Posted by: tommy1957 on Jan 22, 2008 5:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The situation for these women is horrible. Changes could be made to correct the situation, but nobody in a position to make the changes really cares. It is not any better for men. Young kids are thrown in with the same predators of woman on the outside that then turn their attention to week males. Rape is rape and no prisoner deserves this type of punishment (well maybe some). In any event the prison system is full of non-violent felons who come out angry at the world because of their experiences of violence and rape in prison. They usually wind up committing more crimes and wind up back in the hell holes that are our modern day prisons. There are a lot of good guards, but they are over shadowed by those who are corrupt and allow crimes to be committed in prison. I once saw a documentary about the "Boston Strangler"; AKA Richard Speck who was bragging about having drugs and sex in prison. Sickening! Prisoners need to be treated more like the Guantanamo Bay. Strictly observed to ensure their health and welfare.

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