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City Unveils New Rape Kit Storage Facility

A Memphis Police officer demonstrates the accordion-style doors at the new storage facility.

Beginning tomorrow, the city’s backlogged rape kits will be moved into a new, $1 million dedicated storage facility on Klinke Avenue in North Memphis.

The new, 900-square-foot, climate-controlled facility was unveiled in a press conference on Wednesday afternoon. The facility is designed to store 50,400 rape kits. It has four sub-zero freezers for storing temperature-sensitive material. There’s also a special “drying room” for articles that have been exposed to bodily fluids. 

Planning for the facility began back in August 2013 after the Memphis City Council approved funding for storing DNA evidence collected in rape cases.

“The kits stored here are more than just inanimate objects. These kits represent traumatized, victimized people and must be handled with care,” said Mayor A C Wharton. “This allows the space to do just that.”

Doug McGowan, coordinator for the Memphis Sexual Assault Kit Task Force, said 43 percent of the backlogged rape kits have completed analysis, and 23 percent are at a lab awaiting analysis. He said all of the kits should be at the lab within the next 12 months.

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Upcoming Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Awareness Events Focus on Men

A full day of events addressing issues of sexual assault and domestic violence is planned for Thursday, June 25th, but the intended audience isn’t the demographic most affected by those crimes.

Rather than focus on women for these events, the Sexual Assault Kit (SAK) Taskforce is inviting men to be guests at its quarterly “community conversation” event. That public forum will be immediately followed by the annual Walk a Mile in Her Shoes event, where men are asked to don high heels for a one-mile awareness walk.

“Men have been basically silent on the issues of domestic violence and sexual assault. And the silence is what creates the permissive space for abusers to be abusive,” said Kevin Reed, the Shelby County judicial commissioner over the domestic violence court and a member of the SAK Taskforce.

David Wayne Brown

Participants in a past Walk a Mile event

The taskforce, which was established in January 2014 to deal with the city’s rape kit backlog, has been hosting quarterly public forums since its formation. The first few meetings lacked a theme, but they’ve begun narrowing the intended audience. Taskforce coordinator Doug McGowan said they invited women’s groups last time, and the next meeting will focus on student groups. But men’s groups are invited to this upcoming meeting, scheduled for 3 p.m. on June 25th at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts.

“Men have to understand that we have a role to play. We want to come up with ways that men can be part of the solution, whether that’s holding each other collectively accountable or teaching the next generation of young men the expectations for behavior relative to domestic violence and sexual assault,” McGowan said.

The Memphis Area Women’s Council (MAWC) is behind the annual Walk a Mile event, which is in its fifth year. The walk kicks off at 5 p.m., immediately following the community conversation meeting. Participants will walk from the Cannon Center to the FedExForum Plaza, and while high heels aren’t required, they are encouraged.

“We as women aren’t giving up any responsibility or energy to change this. We’re saying that men have to unite with us,” said Deborah Clubb, executive director of MAWC and a member of the SAK Taskforce

After the walkers arrive at FedExForum Plaza, Mayor A C Wharton’s office will hold a press conference to announce the city’s launch of the Memphis Say No More campaign, a public-awareness campaign that will feature local celebrities and ordinary Memphians speaking out against rape and domestic violence on billboards and posters around town.

The events aren’t without critics. Meaghan Ybos, a rape survivor and activist, said the June 25th events won’t do much to solve the city’s rape kit backlog crisis.

“If Memphis wants to end rape, they can start by prosecuting rapists,” Ybos said. “It’s nice to have PSAs, but the problem in Memphis isn’t that people are unaware that these things are happening. People are very aware that we’re being raped. It’s the police that need to change.”

The SAK Taskforce reported last week that 53 percent of the total inventory of rape kits had been fully analyzed or are at labs awaiting analysis. Of that percentage, only 15 percent have been completely processed for DNA, but that number isn’t often publicly touted. Investigations have resulted in 98 requests for indictments of known individuals or DNA profiles.

When the taskforce began their work of getting the kits tested, there were a little more than 12,300 backlogged kits. Ybos has been critical of the city’s progress, and she says the city shouldn’t be combining the numbers for tested kits with those still awaiting testing at labs.

“That’s a slap in the face to victims because they’re misleading us by claiming progress for something that hasn’t been done yet,” Ybos said.

But Clubb said the tests sitting at labs are at least further along than they were before, when they were piled up for years in the city’s backlog.

“The labs can only do what they can do, and we’re using four labs,” Clubb said. “Other cities and counties are trying to get stuff to labs too, and rape kits aren’t the only thing the labs are trying to process. We can’t speed it up, but we’re staying on it.”

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News The Fly-By

Memphis Rape Kit Fight Gets New Ally

Memphis law enforcement got a new national ally last week in its fight to clear the city’s backlog of untested rape kits while leaders here promised survivors they’d keep that fight alive.

Memphis Police Department (MPD) Deputy Chief Jim Harvey said last Thursday that the city still needs about $3.7 million to complete its rape kit testing project. 

The day before that, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office announced a new, $35 million fund to help cities like Memphis clear their backlogs. That fund will be the largest single donation to help clear the nation’s rape kit backlog, which the Department of Justice says includes more than 400,000 untested kits.  

The announcement from New York City came as a surprise to Memphis leaders even though Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance name-dropped Memphis in his national news conference announcing the fund.      

“What stands in the way of identifying the scope [of the untested rape kit backlog] across the country and then having local law enforcement testing them is, quite simply, money,” Vance said.  

The new funds come from money forfeited from national banks that violated U.S. sanctions in aiding rogue regimes across the world, Vance said, specifically pointing to Libya and Sudan.

Applications for the new funds will br available in the spring, and when they are, Memphis will be at the table, said Doug McGowen, director of the Mayor’s Innovation Delivery Team. Meanwhile, McGowen said the city will “leave no stone unturned” to find the resources to test the city’s rape kits. 

McGowen and Harvey both spoke last week in one of a series of events called “Sexual Assault Survivor Services: A Community Conversation.” 

The open meetings were mandated in an executive order by Memphis Mayor A C Wharton. He said during the meeting last week that rape is “a cancer that has to be wiped out.” He vowed to the small group gathered at First Baptist Church on Broad Avenue that he’d keep the process transparent.   

“If we find more, you’ll hear about them, as embarrassing as that may be,” Wharton said. “Hopefully, we’ve gotten all of them. But if not, and we find more, we’re not going to sweep it under the rug. We’re going to come right out and tell you that we found some more.”

Harvey likened the situation here to the Titanic. The Memphis media has portrayed it as a sinking ship, he said, but “we’ve sent the cameras down, and we’re pulling treasure out of the Titanic.” Clues are the treasures he said will lead his agency to arrest “hard-core criminals,” whose crimes likely go beyond rape.

“These are violent criminals,” he said. “It’s not about sex. It’s about violence.  So, if we can get one of these guys off the street, then we’ve stopped them from committing any number of other crimes.” 

Meanwhile, Congress is sitting on a $51.2 billion spending bill that includes $41 million for “a new community-based sexual assault response reform initiative.” Congressman Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) secured $5 million for the sexual assault program that appeared in versions of the bill that got approvals from House and Senate committees.   

The reform program would include funds for testing rape kits but also for the investigation and prosecution of sexual assault crimes, training law enforcement officers, and victim services. The program is intended to improve law enforcement’s response to sexual assault and services to victims.

A budget vote, which includes the rape kit funding, is one of several issues before the lame-duck Congress this week. The government faces another shutdown unless lawmakers can pass a budget or a stop-gap measure by December 11th.