Believe Survivors and Support Them

I have debated for a few days now on if I should make this blog post and decided that yes it's needed and may even help some of my readers.

If you're reading this and are a survivor, YOU ARE NOT ALONE. If you want to reach out to me but don't want to comment to talk you can feel free to email me at mama4life07@gmail.com to talk privately.

This is the tattoo that I have for my own story and am using for this post.

Joyful Heart Foundation Applauds New Funding through Manhattan DA to Help Address National Rape Kit Backlog

As I have previously posted, April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month and I am going to be posting any releases I receive via email from NO MORE and The Joyful Heart Foundation, to help raise awareness with my readers.
NEW YORK - The Joyful Heart Foundation today applauded the availability of $35 million in new grants to aid jurisdictions working to end the backlog of untested rape kits in the United States. The funding, made available through a unique new program by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office (DANY), can be used to test previously unanalyzed rape kits. 

DNA evidence contained in a rape kit can identify unknown assailants, confirm the presence of a known suspect, affirm the survivor’s account of the attack, connect the suspect to other unsolved crimes, and exonerate innocent suspects. And yet, there are thousands upon thousands of rape kits sitting untested across the country representing countless leads to investigate, survivors to re-engage with compassion and care, and cases to prosecute.

“This step by District Attorney Cyrus Vance is truly visionary,” said Maile M. Zambuto, CEO of Joyful Heart, which will serve as a technical advisor to DANY for this initiative. “Focusing a national effort on comprehensive rape kit reform demonstrates a commitment to survivors that we will do everything possible to bring healing and justice. It sends a message to perpetrators that they will be held accountable for their crimes.”

In 1999, New York City discovered 17,000 untested sexual assault evidence kits, commonly referred to as rape kits, in its storage facilities. The City analyzed all of these kits, investigated DNA hits, and prosecuted offenders—taking dangerous criminals off the streets and bringing justice to survivors. 

Yet while some jurisdictions are leading the way toward comprehensive rape kit reform, there is still much work to be done. Many cities have not counted the untested kits in their custody. Others that have acknowledged backlogs have not done anything further toward finding a solution. Those cities that do have the will to commit to eliminating their backlogs often lack the resources necessary to do so, and testing kits is just the first step toward healing for survivors, accountability for perpetrators, and safety for our communities. Jurisdictions must also commit to investigating and following up on leads generated by testing, re-engaging survivors with compassion and care, and moving cases forward to prosecution.

Joyful Heart Founder Mariska Hargitay, who joined DA Vance at a press conference in late 2014 to announce this initiative, said: “The rape kit backlog sends two terrible messages: to victims, it says: you don’t matter. What happened to you doesn’t matter. And to criminals, it says: what you did doesn't matter. Testing the kits reverses those messages. Survivors hear the message: You do matter. What happened to you matters. Your cases matter.”

DANY’s funding supplements an additional $41 million being made available through the U. S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), which will allow jurisdictions to not only test backlogged kits in their police storage facilities, but to also create multi-disciplinary teams to investigate and prosecute cases, and address the need for victim notification and re-engagement with the criminal justice system.

States, territories, units of local and tribal government, law enforcement agencies, and public forensic labs are eligible to apply for funding. Each award will be for up to $2 million over a two-year period. Proposals are due on June 1, 2015 by 5:00pm ET. 
For more information, including details about an upcoming informational webinar hosted by DANY on April 20, 2015, go to manhattanda.org

For background and further information on the rape kit backlog, go to: ENDTHEBACKLOG.org

#SAAM - April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month! Say NO MORE!

Why? Because 1 in 5 women is a survivor of rape, and 1 in 2 women and 1 in 5 men have experienced some form of sexual violence in their lives. NO MORE. 



April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM). Learn how you can be part of the solution and say #NOMORE to sexual assault by clicking HERE to learn more! The NO MORE campaign was started by Law and Order Special Victims Unit's lead actress, Mariska Hargitay. 


She has made a HUGE difference in my life just by watching the show for so many years, as well as the lives of so many survivors and families of survivors through her courage and persistance to start making changes in the United States by saying NO MORE to sexual assault, as well as domestic violence. She has done so so so much to influence survivors JUST through being the most caring detective now sargent on SVU which you can watch on Wednesday nights at 9pm on NBC! 

She has helped so many survivors gain the courage to speak up and out on these horrible crimes and press charges. Yes, I know that it's "just a show", but it also pertains to real life issues that women and girls and even men / boys face today. She's a very compassionate person and I would be honored to be able to meet her someday. I really do hope to be able to.

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month

I know I don't write about many personal topics, such as sexual assault awareness on my blog but it's a big deal to me as a survivor to help get the awareness out to others throughout the community, as well as online to help others as a whole to realize how serious of a matter it is. 

I am trying to put together an awareness event on my blog through posts and reviews of awareness products, so keep reading to see what I am interested in review wise. Please keep in mind that for this event, I do NOT have a minimum the product or products need to be.

I have been thinking about it and wanted to see about doing an April Awareness Month for this cause, and do a few reviews of awareness like items such as bracelets, pens, t-shirts, and anything else that could help others to spread the word on the matter.

If you're an organization, company, or shop and would like to help with this through product review please email me at mama4life07@gmail.com and let me know what you'd like to sponsor for it and I will add you to my schedule for a review, for April.

April: Sexual Assault Awareness - Federal funding needed for rape kit reform

*All of the information provided in this post was sent to me by a press release of sorts. None of it is my words.

Federal funding needed for rape kit reform
By Memphis Mayor A C Wharton, Jr. (D) and Sarah Tofte

Over the past several years, news has poured in about thousands of untested rape kits found in police evidence facilities in cities across the country—20,000 in Texas, 12,669 in Los Angeles, 4,000 in Illinois, 5,523 in Ohio, 11,304 in Detroit and 12,164 in Memphis.

The discovery of each trove of untested kits is shocking to the public, concerning to survivors of sexual violence, disappointing to victim advocates, and humbling for law enforcement. The announcement that President Obama’s FY15 budget includes – for the first time – $35 million in dedicated funding, to support community response teams in their work to address untested rape kits in police storage facilities, is a relief to public officials committed to comprehensive reform.

We understand the opportunities for justice and healing contained in those untested kits. DNA from the kit can identify an unknown rapist, confirm the identity of a known assailant, corroborate the victim's account, and exonerate innocent suspects. In a jurisdiction like New York City, with a long-standing policy to test every rape kit booked into police evidence, the arrest rate for rape skyrocketed from 40 percent to 70 percent once mandatory rape kit testing was implemented. When Detroit tested its first 1600 kits, it found 100 serial rapists, and linked rape kits to crimes in 22 states and the District of Columbia.

With such powerful reasons to test rape kits, it's no wonder that this country is moving towards significant rape kit reform. Cities and states are going into their storage facilities and counting their rape kits to assess whether they have a problem. Jurisdictions with larger numbers of untested rape kits are finding the resources to test their rape kits, and changing their policies to ensure every rape kit booked into police custody is sent to a crime lab for testing.

But we know that testing the rape kits is just the first step to comprehensive reform. Once the problem is acknowledged and the first kits are sent out for testing, cities are left to grapple with the enormous task of not just finding a way to test all of their rape kits, but also figuring out how to investigate and prosecute the cases connected to the untested kits, re-engage survivors in the process, and address any systemic failures that led so many rape kits to get left behind in police storage in the first place.

This work takes political will, but it also takes significant resources, and up until now, finding the money has been a struggle. In the City of Memphis, which has made a commitment to comprehensive rape kit reform, we have turned to our City Council and state government to pay for the cost of testing our rape kits, but our search continues for the funding necessary to pursue every lead from rape kit testing, conduct victim notification, and provide comprehensive services to survivors whose untested kits were neglected for so long.

The $35 million contained in the president’s budget is what we need to get our job done - to uphold our commitment to pursue every lead from testing our rape kits, reform our criminal justice response to rape, engage survivors in the process, and bring offenders to justice.

Wharton has been the mayor of Memphis, Tennessee since 2009. Tofte is the vice president of Policy & Advocacy at the Joyful Heart Foundation.