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The Rape "epidemic"


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#1 Jess

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 11:57 AM

The rape "epidemic" By Kathryn Masterson RedEye Published January 25, 2006 In December, over DePaul's winter break, police reported that a man broke into a student's apartment and sexually assaulted her. Police and university officials alerted the public to the crime, and the case received attention from newspapers and TV stations. But the DePaul case wasn't the only sexual assault in Chicago that weekend, said Angela Exson, the head of advocacy for Rape Victim Advocates. That same weekend, volunteers from the group responded to 11 sexual assault victims in emergency rooms across the city. "What we see in the newspaper or on television--it doesn't match what we see as service providers," Exson said. Rape "happens every single day." In Chicago last year, sexual assaults (including rape and other types of sexual penetration) were reported to police at an average of more than three a day. Most of those cases never made the news. They were reported in every neighborhood but one, at nearly every time of day. The heaviest concentration of reports came from the city's South and West Sides. Anti-rape activists say the number of rapes in Chicago is higher than police data shows, because most go unreported. "It's an epidemic," said Tara Bryant Edwards, director of counseling for Rape Victim Advocates. "It's an epidemic, and it touches everyone, directly or indirectly." The public isn't aware of the high number of rapes, Bryant Edwards said, because many don't fit society's idea of a stranger jumping out of the bushes at women. Instead, the rapist usually is someone the victim knows. Acquaintance rape can be as devastating as an attack from a stranger, Bryant Edwards said. "These are life-changing events," she said. "People feel like they lose a part of themselves. Their relationships change ... it claims a part of their lives." To examine the scope of sexual assault across the city last year, RedEye reported the location, date and time of every sexual assault of a victim 13 or older reported to Chicago police in 2005. According to Chicago police, there were 1,214 such reports in 2005, an average of 3.3 a day. (RedEye data showed 1,239 reports. Monique Bond, director of news affairs for the police department, said the 25-case disparity is due to police later ruling some reports as unfounded.) Police data for 2005 show a total of 1,618 sexual assaults and attempted assaults (including adults and children) in the city, a drop from 1,757 in 2004. Bond attributes the decline to new strategies for deploying police officers in communities to combat all kinds of crimes. According to a RedEye analysis of police data, every Chicago neighborhood but one--Clearing, on the Southwest Side--had at least one reported sexual assault in 2005. Almost two dozen neighborhoods had 20 or more reported sexual assaults during the year. The communities that saw the largest number of reported sexual assaults--and the highest rate of sexual assaults by population--were mostly on the city's West and South Sides. Austin had the most reported assaults with 100; South Shore had 50. Communities with a high rate of reported rapes included Woodlawn, Greater Grand Crossing, Roseland, Englewood, Chatham and East Garfield Park. Detective Jeffrey Roberts investigates sex crimes for Area 2, which covers a large part of the South Side. Last year, he and his partner investigated close to 100 sexual assault cases, he said. Few of the cases he investigates become "heater" cases--like the DePaul attack--that draw attention and resources. More than half of the cases he sees are acquaintance rapes--someone from the neighborhood, an acquaintance of the victim's family--that don't warrant a community alert or sketch of a suspect. About 10 percent of Roberts' cases involve women who are drug users or prostitutes whose lifestyles make their cases difficult to prosecute. Cases in higher-crime areas usually don't draw as much attention from the media and law enforcement as violent crimes in neighborhoods most people view as safe, Roberts said. Roberts said he doesn't want any less attention for cases such as the DePaul rape or other North Side assaults. He'd like to see more attention provided for all sex crimes. "It should be done everywhere," Roberts said. "I'm not saying don't do it. Do it for every one." Roberts said all victims of sex crimes deserve equal treatment, no matter the circumstances surrounding their assault. "A victim's a victim. I don't care about gender, color or class," he said. "It doesn't matter if you're making a million dollars or you're on public assistance. If you're sexually assaulted, you're still going to have the same nightmares." Roberts did have a "heater" last fall when police linked a series of home invasions and sexual assaults or attempted assaults to one man. Victims reported that a man wearing a black ski mask broke into their homes when they were alone and attacked them. Police issued an alert and later arrested 21-year-old Prince Richard. He has been charged with three counts of criminal sexual assault, five counts of home invasion and two counts of burglary, Roberts said. He currently is being held without bond, according to the Cook County Sheriff's department. Roberts believes better use of DNA could help police catch more rapists or catch them earlier. If DNA was taken from suspects arrested for crimes such as burglary or home invasion and put into a databank, it could help identify perpetrators if they had committed a sexual assault, he said. A bill that would require DNA samples from everyone arrested for a felony has been proposed several times by State Rep. Susana Mendoza (D-Chicago) but has stalled in Springfield. "Serial rapists would be shut down pretty quickly," Mendoza said about the proposed DNA samples. Activists want a faster response. Tenille Power, who runs sexual assault services at the YWCA Harris Center on the South Side, was angry about what she believed was a slow response from law enforcement to the South Side serial attacks in the fall. Power believed other areas, such as Wrigleyville in late 2004, received a faster response when a series of rapes were reported. "That type of response does not happen on the South Side of Chicago," Power said. Power believes the community needs to speak up, and that people should not accept and expect violence just because they live in certain neighborhoods. She'd like to see the community confront the issue of rape with education and discussion about ways to reduce it. "We don't talk about rape," Power said. "We sweep it under the rug and move on."

#2 TJENZ

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 12:07 PM

rape being an epidemic on a college campus is nothing new When I was at ISU, in the late 80's, I had a few friends that ran the dorms. For every rape you heard about there was 20 more that got swept under the rug and who knows how many more that went completely unreported to any agency. I'm sending my daughter to an all girls school

#3 Jigga

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 12:13 PM

rape is bullshit though .

#4 TJENZ

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 12:16 PM

rape is bullshit though some girls like that shit. i wont ever do it though.

fucking idiot

just when I was starting to like you

#5 Bhickman

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 12:18 PM

Rapists, child molesters and murderers (unless clearly in self-defense or completely accidental) should all be put down like rabid dogs. I have no empathy/compassion/sympathy for any person who fits in one of those categories.
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#6 Jigga

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 12:18 PM

why am i an idiot, i just said it was bullshit

#7 Bhickman

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 12:21 PM

"Say: Fuck......Me.....Nigger...."
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#8 held

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 01:29 PM

The growth of sex crimes probably continues to go unnoticed because it's only being reported in the 'Red Eye' which I thought was dead? :huh: Still, it's more disturbing given the massive numbers being attributed in South Africa not to mention the growing number of unreported actions in the days after Katrina hit in the New Orleans area. Btw. the death toll is still slowly climbing. It's almost 1400. Further acts of mass euthenasia are still being investigated as well. Not sure about sex crimes within the Chicagoland area overall. It's been a factor that while we associate the murder rate as being lower. The established catagorizing of crimes has changed so that its either confusing or has mixed the figures so that the totals look better and don't accurately show the reality. Still, I don't know what rehabilitation there really is and the reports have usually indicated that predators have been placed in these areas due to the fact that no other areas would accept care center/halfway housing for these inidividuals for fear of further potential criminal acts.
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#9 thrillho

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 05:55 PM

The growth of sex crimes probably continues to go unnoticed because it's only being reported in the 'Red Eye' which I thought was dead? :huh:

no, the "red streak" is dead. which was owned by the sun-time. "red eye" is affiliated with the trib and i think 77% of it's readership comes from people who need to do sudoku on the el.

#10 velocity

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 05:57 PM

"Say: Fuck......Me.....Nigger...."

Yeah, this fixes everything. <_< :angry:

Especially since Jigga is white.

#11 Bhickman

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 06:15 PM

Yeah, this fixes everything. <_< :angry:

Especially since Jigga is white.



It's a Howard Stern show reference...there's a tape of a film (I haven't a clue if it's porn or what it is), where this black guy is fucking a white chick and he makes her say that to him.
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#12 held

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 06:31 PM

It's a Howard Stern show reference...there's a tape of a film (I haven't a clue if it's porn or what it is), where this black guy is fucking a white chick and he makes her say that to him.


Uh, the film is 'Storytelling' by Todd Solondz and the guy is screwing his student who in turn writes about the experience and no one believes her... like all of Solondz projects. They're usually always attempting to be as repugnant as possible. <_<

I'd hardly see it as a distinct 'Stern' reference either. :blink: Although he does use it a great deal.

no, the "red streak" is dead. which was owned by the sun-time. "red eye" is affiliated with the trib and i think 77% of it's readership comes from people who need to do sudoku on the el.


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#13 Howard Rock

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 07:52 PM

sex crimes


Not picking on you luckyluc, but even, this way that we talk about these violent crimes is problematic...as if rape has anything to do with sex. As if "sex" can be "sex" without two willing partners.

#14 kalmia

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 08:16 PM

Not picking on you luckyluc, but even, this way that we talk about these violent crimes is problematic...as if rape has anything to do with sex. As if "sex" can be "sex" without two willing partners.



Then what is it? How else do you define it?
_

#15 Howard Rock

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 08:25 PM

Then what is it? How else do you define it?


What is what? What does rape have to do with sex? Rape is about power not sex. How can anyone who is raped be engaged in a sexual act? Sex, by its very nature, is something you willingly give to another person (not to be bogged down in any religous meanings).

#16 Demon_Cleaner

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 08:35 PM

What is what? What does rape have to do with sex? Rape is about power not sex. How can anyone who is raped be engaged in a sexual act? Sex, by its very nature, is something you willingly give to another person (not to be bogged down in any religous meanings).


Don't be ridiculous.

#17 Howard Rock

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 08:36 PM

Don't be ridiculous.


:mellow:

#18 Demon_Cleaner

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 08:38 PM

murderers (unless clearly in self-defense or completely accidental)


It's not murder in that case. It's manslaughter at worst.

#19 velocity

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Posted 25 January 2006 - 09:01 PM

Don't be ridiculous.

Look at it this way: the crime of sexual assault all about the assault.

#20 held

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Posted 26 January 2006 - 11:21 AM

Not picking on you luckyluc, but even, this way that we talk about these violent crimes is problematic...as if rape has anything to do with sex. As if "sex" can be "sex" without two willing partners.


Sex crime From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Sex crimes are forms of human sexual behavior that are crimes. Someone who commits one is said to be a sex offender.

Some sex crimes are crimes of violence that involve sex. Others are violations of social taboos, such as indecent exposure or exhibitionism.

There is much variation among cultures as to what is considered a crime or not, and in what ways or to what extent crimes are punished.

Acts regarded as crimes almost universally include the following non-consensual sex crimes:

Lust murder
Rape, sexual assault and other forms of sexual abuse
Sexual harassment (including voyeurism) is also viewed as a crime in Western cultures.
Child sexual abuse or molestation
Child pornography
Liberal western cultures are far more tolerant of acts, such as oral sex or transvestism, that have traditionally been held to be crimes in some other cultures, but combine this with lesser tolerance for the remaining crimes.

Many consensual and victimless sexual actions or activities are only viewed as crimes in some jurisdictions, including:

Adultery
Anal sex
Sex among juveniles (usually as Statutory rape)
Homosexuality
Oral sex
Various Paraphilias/Fetishes (Sexual) such as
transvestic fetishism
BDSM
Pornography
Prostitution and/or pimping
Ownership of vibrators and other sex toys


I don't think you were picking on me but I don't think you exactly comprehend all the variations of crime and those that are labeled as 'sexual' because they involve 'involuntary' abuses to someone.
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