Charges filed in only 4 of 28 rapes
Deepa Bharath
Charges were filed by the Orange County district attorney in only
four out of 28 rapes reported in the city between January and
September 2003, officials said.
The city saw a 154% increase in rapes, according to a report
released by the state attorney general’s office on Wednesday.
Reported incidents went up from 11 during the first nine months of
2002 to 28 during the same period in 2003.
There is no explanation for why rapes -- or for that matter any of
the violent crimes -- go up or down, Costa Mesa Police Det. Sgt. Jack
Archer said.
Many of the Costa Mesa incidents involved alcohol or date rape
drugs and very rarely involved stranger attacks, Archer said. In
almost all cases, the victim and suspect knew each other, he said.
“Two out of the 28 cases were unfounded,” he said. “In all other
cases, except for the four that were filed, either there was little
or no evidence that a crime had occurred or the victims themselves
decided not to go any further with it.”
In all four of the cases that were filed, the victim and the
suspect knew each other.
The increasing number of reported rape cases doesn’t surprise
Heather Banuelos, program director for Sexual Assault Victims
Services, which serves as Orange County’s rape crisis center.
“We’re seeing an increasing trend everywhere because more and more
people are reporting them,” she said. “And that’s because people are
becoming more aware and getting educated about how to react if they
ever become a rape victim.”
Last year alone, the center helped almost 1,800 victims, Banuelos
said.
“Less than half of the reported incidents actually get filed,” she
said.
The sooner victims report the incident to police, the better the
chance of prosecution, Banuelos said.
The center works with the police department to take the victims to
Anaheim Memorial Medical center, where they would be given a “rape
kit exam,” she said.
“Collecting evidence is very important,” she said. “It’s very hard
to prosecute a case when it’s he said, she said.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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