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How Does Texas Legally Handle Sexual Assault and Rape Cases?

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Rape kits are one tool used to prosecute rape cases. As the case against Bill Cosby grows, Christopher Kaiser for the Texas Association Against Sexual Assault explains how Texas law deals with sexual assault cases.

From Texas Standard:

Allegations that Bill Cosby sexually assaulted or raped multiple women have been making headlines for several months. Now, thanks to the Associated Press, his previous admission to slipping sedatives to women has come to light. The 10-year-old deposition was part of a sexual assault trial filed by a former Temple University employee against Cosby. The case was settled privately in 2006, so no final verdict was issued.

Quaaludes, a prescription sleep aid that rose to popularity in the 1960s, were outlawed in the U.S. in 1984. The drug acts as a sedative and interacts strongly with alcohol. Now, it often comes up in sexual assault cases. In the deposition, Cosby said he had seven prescriptions to the drug.

However, this information will do little to help the women who’ve come forward against Cosby so far. Since the drug was banned thirty years ago, the statute of limitations — at least in Texas — has long passed.

Christopher Kaiser is a staff attorney for the Texas Association Against Sexual Assault, he joins the Texas Standard to untangle the state’s laws on sexual assault and rape cases.

In Texas, the statute of limitations in rape cases is 10 years for victims who were adults when they were assaulted. For kids, there’s no statute of limitations whatsoever in criminal cases. In civil cases, like Cosby’s, it’s only a five-year limitation for adults and 15 years for children.

Kaiser says the reason the statute of limitations exists at all goes back to the philosophy behind English common law. It exists so that someone doesn’t have to live the rest of their life with the threat of the hammer of justice dropping, which, he says, makes sense for cases like petty theft. But in sexual assault cases, Kaiser says the differences are “the effects of trauma and the dynamics at play when victims are trying to come forward and speak out.”

The statute of limitations doesn’t make as much sense in those cases, Kaiser says.

Rape kits are another contentious issue in Texas, Kaiser says. One problem is that a lot of the kits go into evidence closets without having been tested, so it’s unclear what’s in them. And even when a kit is tested and the evidence identifies the perpetrator, that might be beside the point anyway, if the issue is whether or not sex was consensual.

“What we’re seeing is that over time, you might have the same defendant make that same argument in several cases,”” Kaiser says. Like in the Cosby case, someone could get away with it once, but then several years down the road more women or men could come forward. Then it’d be necessary to be able to draw patterns and hold that person accountable, Kaiser says.

In Texas, the Cosby investigation could lead to some productive changes, Kaiser says. “I think that we’re seeing a lot more education among people who are in a position to make a difference."

David entered radio journalism thanks to a love of storytelling, an obsession with news, and a desire to keep his hair long and play in rock bands. An inveterate political junkie with a passion for pop culture and the romance of radio, David has reported from bases in Washington, London, Los Angeles, and Boston for Monitor Radio and for NPR, and has anchored in-depth public radio documentaries from India, Brazil, and points across the United States and Europe. He is, perhaps, known most widely for his work as host of public radio's Marketplace. Fulfilling a lifelong dream of moving to Texas full-time in 2005, Brown joined the staff of KUT, launching the award-winning cultural journalism unit "Texas Music Matters."
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