JMorris's blog

Oprah, Perry talk about child sexual abuse

Sun 24 Oct 2010
Posted by JMorris in 

"He was beaten, scarred and nearly broken. In a groundbreaking interview, Hollywood mogul Tyler Perry reveals the devastating details of his childhood sexual abuse."

PCAR Trains Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANE)

Wed 29 Sep 2010
Posted by JMorris in 

PCAR received American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds via the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency to increase the number of sexual assault nurse examiners. The goal of the SANE Project is to train more than 100 more nurses across the Commonwealth to improve care and services to victims and to increase the marketability of registered nurses. The first PCAR facilitated course was held at Penn State Hershey Medical Center September 13-17, 2010.

Former radio host contests judgment

Sun 26 Sep 2010
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Saturday, September 25, 2010

Editorial: Educators Backed Attacker

Tue 21 Sep 2010
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from the Bloomsburg, PA Press Enterprise

Southern made a tragedy worse

Try to picture this scene, and see if it doesn't make your blood boil: A teenage boy has been declared delinquent for sexually assaulting a girl with whom he attends high school, and now he must appear for sentencing.
There in the courtroom is the principal, the man who is supposed to oversee the education of both the attacker and the victim.
What does the principal do?
With the family of the victim looking on in disbelief, he tells the judge that the attacker is a young man of good character.

Two Pennsylvanians recently became heroes for reporting suspected child sexual abuse

Mon 20 Sep 2010
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An Ellwood City man, suspicious of his neighbor’s relationship with a 12 year old girl, checked the state’s Megan’s Law list and discovered the man was a registered sex offender. Shortly after the neighbor reported the perpetrator to the local police, the victim disclosed that Samuel Edward Ross, 46, had assaulted her. The AP reported that the girl’s parents knew that Ross had a criminal record but were unaware it was for molesting a 13-year-old New Castle girl in 2003.

An AT&T employee at the Christiana Mall in Delaware reported to authorities that a customer had child pornography on his cell phone. The employee had been transferring data from the man’s Blackberry to his new iPhone and discovered the images including one of a young girl being raped. Police found additional child pornography on the man’s laptop. The suspect admitted that the images were his.

You can read more about these heroes in the articles below:

U.S. Senate Hearing on Rape Cases

Mon 20 Sep 2010
Posted by JMorris in 

Last week U.S. Senator Arlen Specter (D-PA) held a hearing in Washington, D.C. to hear from experts and victims about the mishandling of rape cases. The hearing also addressed the FBI's antiquated definition of rape and how the system of collecting data on incidents of rape is outdated. Below are news stories and press releases covering this story:
 
Feds undercounting rape victims, advocates warn

"I was victimized once by my rapist and then subsequently by the court system"

Fri 10 Sep 2010
Posted by JMorris in 

Pennsylvania is one of two states that doesn't allow for them to testify, but many say doing so could help jury members understand the behavior of the victims.
Thursday, September 09, 2010
BY ASHLEY MANNINGS
 
For The Patriot-News
http://www.pennlive.com/news/patriotnews/index.ssf?/base/news/1284000906102700.xml&coll=1
 
 
Kate Rush Cook believes that if an expert in what a sexual assault victim goes through was allowed to testify at her trial, the man who was acquitted of raping her would not have been turned loose.
 
"I was victimized once by my rapist and then subsequently by the court system," said Cook, of York County.
 
Pennsylvania is one of only two states that does not allow expert testimony in sexual assault cases, which many claim could help jury members better understand the behavior of the victims. Minnesota is the other.
 
Rep. Cherelle Parker, D-Philadelphia, is sponsoring a bill that would allow a qualified expert to testify regarding symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and any recognized and accepted victim behavior in sexual assault cases.
 
Seventeen years ago, Cook was kidnapped, terrorized, robbed and raped. She reported the crime amid tears and hysteria, but it wasn't until her trial that she realized she was not prepared for what she would have to endure.
 
For example, she was asked questions such as where she bought her underwear and what color they were.
 
Sexual assault is the only crime in which the victim is continually scrutinized and questioned, said Jennifer Storm, executive director of the Victim/Witness Assistance Program.
 
During Cook's trial, it became clear that not only did she have to recall the painful memories that occurred that day, but she had to defend herself against myths and stereotypes the jurors had about rape victims.
 
"While my rapist was on trial, I was made to feel as if I had to prove my innocence," she said.
 

Sen. Specter to Hold Hearings on Rape Investigations

Thu 9 Sep 2010
Posted by JMorris in 

Hearing spurred in part by Sun reporting on cases in city
 
By Justin Fenton, The Baltimore Sun
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/bs-md-senate-hearing-rapes-20100907,0,4630153.story
 
Concerned that police departments nationwide fail to fully investigate rapes, a congressional committee will examine the issue next week at a hearing spurred partly by a Baltimore Sun examination of the systemic underreporting of sex crimes.
 
The Senate Crime and Drugs subcommittee has asked representatives of the Office of Violence Against Women to appear in Washington to discuss the problem, as well as a Pennsylvania woman jailed by police who erroneously accused her of making a false rape report.
 
The Sun reported in July that Baltimore for years led the nation in the percentage of rape cases in which police concluded that the victim was lying, with more than 3 in 10 cases determined to be "unfounded." Other cities have seen disturbingly high percentages of uninvestigated or dropped race cases in years past, and a women's advocate in Philadelphia pushed for the congressional hearing after the Sun's investigation reignited concerns.
 
The newspaper's report "made me believe that all of the issues [in other cities] were not just idiosyncratic problems, but that there is likely a chronic and systemic failure in police departments," said Carol E. Tracy, head of the Women's Law Project in Philadelphia. "I think it's important to expose it, and to encourage the federal government, which has very little jurisdiction around this, to nevertheless exercise greater accountability on the data that it does receive."

New York Law Clears Records for Survivors of Sex Trafficking

Mon 23 Aug 2010
Posted by JMorris in 

Last week New York Governor David Patterson signed a law, the first of its kind in the U.S. that would allow those forced into prostitution or sex trafficking to erase prior prostitution convictions from their records completely.
Read more here:
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/16/new-law-allows-sex-traffick...

Remarks by the President Before Signing the Tribal Law and Order Act

Tue 3 Aug 2010
Posted by JMorris in 

The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
 

For Immediate Release
 
July 29, 2010

4:58 P.M. EDT
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  Please have a seat.
 
     I want to start, obviously, by thanking Lisa for her introduction and having the courage to share her story with all of us today.  It’s for every survivor like Lisa who has never gotten their day in court, and for every family that feels like justice is beyond reach, and for every tribal community struggling to keep its people safe, that I’ll be signing the Tribal Law and Order Act into law today. 
 
     And in doing so, I intend to send a clear message that all of our people -- whether they live in our biggest cities or our most remote reservations -- have the right to feel safe in their own communities, and to raise their children in peace, and enjoy the fullest protection of our laws. 
 
     As many of you know, I campaigned on this issue.  And during our last -- during our tribal conference last year, I pledged my administration’s fullest support for this bill.  And I told Senator Dorgan last week that I intended to sign it in a ceremony here at the White House with all of you.  So today, I am proud to make good on my word.

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