In 2019, Melissa Morabito, Ph.D., Linda M. Williams, Ph.D., and April Pattavina, Ph.D., of our Justice and Gender-Based Violence Research Initiative, published findings from a study funded by the National Institutes of Justice that investigated why sexual assault cases fall out of the criminal justice system. In this commentary, originally published in , Dr. Morabito and Dr. Pattavina discuss some of the findings from that study.
As , we were surprised to learn that a jury on .
This surprise was based on our more than a decade of research on the attrition of sexual assault cases from the criminal justice system.
We know that their attack to the police. For those that do report, .
In fact, the overwhelming majority of cases reported to the police do not end in conviction, as evidenced by on sexual assaults reported to the police in six jurisdictions across the United States.
We found that many cases drop out at the investigation stage, with only 18.8% of rapes reported to the police resulting in an arrest. Slightly more than a third of the arrests of adults ended in a conviction. That鈥檚 just 6.5% of investigations.
What we can learn from the Weinstein verdict, and from more generally, is that perhaps the time has come to bolster the criminal justice response to sexual assault in ways that give sexual assault victims the procedural justice they deserve.
, Associate Professor of Criminology and Justice Studies, and , Professor of Criminology and Justice Studies,
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .
