National standards could help prevent prison rape

National standards could help prevent prison rape

Six months before she was scheduled to be released on drug charges, Marilyn Shirley was raped in 2000 by a guard at the Texas prison where she was serving time.

“I am still haunted by the words he whispered in my ear,” Shirley said. “Do you think you’re the only one?” her attacker asked her.

Religious leaders and civil rights advocates say Shirley is far from the only one and are pressing the Department of Justice to implement national standards to help prevent an estimated 60,000 cases of prison rape each year.

“What we are witnessing is justice denied,” said Tim Goeglein, vice president of external relations at Focus on the Family and one of the signers of a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder.

Other signers included representatives from the Southern Baptist Convention, the National Association of Evangelicals, Sojourners, as well as the United Methodist Church, United Church of Christ, American Civil Liberties Union and the National Immigrant Justice Center.

Focus on the Family officials worry that the scars of rape could persist once prisoners return home. “Millions of young people in America have one or two parents in prison,” Goeglein said.

The standards, proposed last year, would subject correctional facilities to audits and establish a protocol for handling rape in their facilities.

According to the 2003 Prison Rape Elimination Act, they were supposed to be enacted by Holder by June of this year.

The standards have already been adopted by California and Oregon without significant additional costs, according to Pat Nolan, vice president of Prison Fellowship.  (RNS)