Rachel Lovell
Research Assistant Professor, Case Western Reserve University
Key Findings
- Findings from previously untested sexual assault kits that were initially not successfully adjudicated indicate that the criminal justice system often places significant bureaucratic burden on victims to identify who sexually assaulted them and to remain engaged in an often harmful process and system.
Description
In this study, Lovell and her co-authors analyzed a large sample of sexual assaults over almost two decades in one urban U.S. jurisdiction with previously untested sexual assault kits that were initially not successfully adjudicated (n = 717). They explored patterns of attrition through descriptive statistics and predictors of attrition through continuation-ratio modeling. Findings provide a more comprehensive framework for examining attrition, exploring the bureaucratic burden placed on victims to identify who sexually assaulted them and to remain engaged in an often harmful process and system. Implications suggest this burden could be eased via increased trauma-informed victim support and protocols and increased use of forensic evidence.