ABA praises standards to prevent prison rape

American Bar Association President Wm. T. Robinson III recently sent a letter to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder praising the U.S. Department of Justice’s adoption of comprehensive national standards to prevent prison rape.

“The Department of Justice gave serious and thoughtful consideration to the comments it received from the ABA and other interested individuals and organizations,” Robinson said. “We commend the department for significantly advancing Congress’s goal of establishing a ‘zero-tolerance standard’ for the incidence of sexual abuse in U.S. prisons, jails and other facilities.”

The ABA is calling on all branches of the federal government, states and localities to implement these standards as a necessary step toward ensuring the human rights and dignity of prisoners.

Earlier this month. the Department of Justice released a final rule to prevent, detect and respond to sexual abuse in confinement facilities, in accordance with the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003.

Supported by a bipartisan coalition of criminal justice, civil rights and religious organizations, PREA was passed unanimously by Congress and signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2003. 

The legislation directed a bipartisan national commission to recommend, and the attorney general to adopt, comprehensive national standards on the detection, prevention, reduction and punishment of prison rape.

In February 2011, the Justice Department requested comments on its proposed PREA standards. 

In April 2011, the ABA submitted comments based on the ABA Criminal Justice Standards on the Treatment of Prisoners, which were adopted by the ABA House of Delegates in February 2010 and express the policy of the ABA.
 

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