by Joseph Mayton
A Los Angeles sheriff’s deputy
has pleaded no contest to charges that he raped two women while he was on the
job. This is part of an alarming trend.
On Thursday, a Los Angeles
County sheriff’s deputy pleaded no contest to rape and sexual assault of two
women. Jose Rigaberto Sanchez, 29, faces a sentence of eight years and eight
months in prison and must register as a sex offender, according the district
attorney’s office.
Both crimes occurred in
September 2010. The first incident included the forcible sodomizing of a
24-year-old woman in Palmdale after Sanchez offered her sex in exchange for not
arresting her. He took her to a desert where the crime occurred.
Two nights later, Sanchez
pulled over a 36-year-old woman on drunk driving suspicion and attempted to
bribe her with sexual favors, according to the Los Angeles Country district
attorney's office.
This is only one of several
recent cases of sexual violence where a police officer has been accused or
convicted of abusing his power and authority to abuse women while on the job.
In January 2012, a Milwaukee jury convicted a policeman of violating the civil
rights of a woman by raping her. In November 2013, a Texas police officer was
accused of raping a 19-year-old woman. And earlier this month a sheriff’s
deputy in Oklahoma was arrested on suspected rape charges at a nursing home.
And in San Jose last week, another
police officer was accused of rape after reportedly being sent to protect a
woman during a domestic dispute. Geoffrey Graves, 38, a six-year veteran of the
force, allegedly assaulted the woman at a hotel where she was staying.
"The officer gained information
and location of her hotel room and then went up there approximately 15 minutes
later and knocked on the door," Santa Clara County deputy district
attorney Carlos Vega said. "Unbeknownst to her, he opened the door. She
was asleep, and that's when he let himself in and forcibly pushed her on the
bed."
According to reports from Next
Door Solutions, a San Jose agency that helps survivors of rape and domestic
violence, the victim did not report the incident for three weeks, fearing
reprisal if she reported the crime. She chose to report the rape to the
California Highway Patrol and not San Jose police, highlighting the growing
social problem of reporting rape to police when officers are involved.
Kathleen Krenek, executive
director of Next Door Solutions, said this is common in many rape cases, where
fears of further violence play a key role in whether a woman reports the
incident.
Statistics concerning sexual
crimes by police against women are hard to come by, but the recent surge in
incidents has left many questioning whether police departments are sending a
strong enough signal over "improper" behavior while on duty.
Sanchez was on paid leave from
the time the report of rape occurred until he was arrested in July 2013,
leaving many women's rights organizations and activists questioning the role of
police in investigating and holding its officers responsible for crimes
committed on the job.
The victim did not report the
incident for three weeks, fearing reprisal if she reported the crime.
The Los Angeles County
Sheriff’s Department did not comment on Sanchez's current status with the force
when questioned as to whether he had been officially fired from his position
following the felony conviction, saying they would not comment on the case
until a later date. Normally, police officials said, a felony conviction is the
basis for dismissal.
The San Jose Police Department
is also embroiled in controversy because Graves, who turned himself in on March
10 and was released the next day on $100,000 bail, also continues to receive
paid leave while the investigation continues.
"This is difficult for
everybody because it reflects on our job and what we do every day, so I know
that the officers are troubled by it,” said San Jose police spokesperson Sgt.
Heather Randol. “But we are resilient, and we have been through other hard
times, and we've pulled together to rebuild the trust of the community, and
that's what we're going to work on doing."
The two cases have put the
specter of rape and sexual violence by police at the forefront of conversations
in California, with many women coming forward to demand more justice for
victims of police abuse of power.
Maria Jesus Gomez, 22, a
cashier at a Bay Area Safeway, said that she narrowly avoided being assaulted
by a Bay Area police officer earlier this year as she was walking home from
work late one evening.
"I was walking home in my
quiet neighborhood when a police officer pulled up and demanded that I get in
the vehicle or face arrest," she said. "I immediately began running
away from the officer and hid behind a home until he left. I didn't know what
to do."
She added that she did not
report the intimidation and feels that other women in the area face similar
abuse by police, who she said "go after the immigrant women because we are
more vulnerable than others and don't have the means to fight back."
Fighting back is key, say
observers and organizations working with sexual violence survivors. If those
who are supposed to be protecting women from violence are the ones perpetrating
the crimes, it makes reporting much more difficult.
"I think a lot of people
in so-called developed countries do not give rape and sexual violence enough
thought," said a former UN Women official now working as a consultant in
the San Francisco Bay Area and who spoke on condition of anonymity. "What
we are witnessing here in California and elsewhere across the country is a
floundering of media reporting and discussion on the role of authority and
sexual violence. The two are linked here in the U.S. and abroad. It is time
that we as a society accept this and start to make efforts to criminalize to
the fullest these perpetrators as a sign that there is no place for rape or
abuse."