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Women Are Suing Austin, Travis County For Failing To Prosecute Sexual Assault

The seal of the City of Austin in Austin City Hall.
Gabriel C. Pérez/KUT
The seal of the City of Austin in Austin City Hall.

From Texas Standard:

Three named plaintiffs  launched a class action lawsuit last year against the City of Austin, Travis County and several local officials, claiming they failed to adequately investigate and prosecute their sexual assault cases.

Thousands of other victims from the Austin area are included in the lawsuit that states “female victims of sexual assault in Austin and Travis County have been denied equal access to justice and equal protection of the law.” The women argue that these failures are a form of gender-based discrimination.

The plaintiffs seek an injunction that would order authorities to better train and supervise staff, adequately test all rape kits and improve interactions with victims. The case – filed in June 2018 – came after reports of large numbers of untested sexual assault evidence collection kits and prolonged, unsolved cases.

The case has drawn national attention, as women in other U.S. cities have started filing similar lawsuits.

Julie Ann Nitsch is one of the three plaintiffs. She says police failed to thoroughly investigate her case. She says police treated her 2010 assault without urgency.

“The first round of questioning was: Where were you? What were you wearing? Why did you walk home? …Why I lived in such a bad neighborhood.” Nitsch says.

Nitsch says police did not collect or photograph evidence in her apartment although there were fingerprints on door handles and a weapon outside the crime scene. Nitsch says she and other victims she has spoken to are left to do the work themselves.  

“I felt like I was an inconvenience," she says. "And the more I speak to other survivors – and it's very similar to my own – you're an inconvenience, they’re angry that they have to be there. And that’s from the first interaction you have with a police officer that comes and responds all the way up to the district attorney offices.”

Nitsch says investigators told her and other victims to ask neighbors whether they had heard suspicious activity.

“You shouldn’t have to investigate a crime that was committed against you – especially a crime as heinous as sexual assault and rape,” Nitsch says. “You shouldn’t have to call and beg your detective repeatedly and ask him to please do his job.”

Nitsch says doing a rape kit in the hospital did not give her assurance that her case would be solved. Nitsch says most rapists – about 80% – are repeat offenders. She says cases are not properly investigated the first time, so running a tested rape kit through CODIS, the federal DNA database, does not guarantee a match on a perpetrator.

“What I’ve been screaming for years and years is: The only way a rapist can get caught is if he’s already been caught,” Nitsch says.

Elizabeth Myers, an attorney for Thompson and Knight, who represents the women who are suing Austin and Travis County, says victims had few options after the mishandling of their cases.

“The way this case came to our attention was: these were survivors who had already tried everything,” Myers says. “And there was no avenue for justice because their cases were declined.”

Myers says statistics and he firsthand accounts indicate that many cases go unprosecuted. She says the prosecution rate for sexual assault is less than 1% in Travis County. She says the nature or difficulty of such cases is not a justification for failing to obtain justice for victims.

“Sexual assault is a crime that is perpetuated against women – overwhelmingly,” Myers says. “But the crime is also treated differently from any other crime - and its because it happens to women.”

Myers says crimes like theft, drug possession and aggravated assault are prosecuted at much higher rates than sexual assault. She says authorities need to shift their priorities to better serve victims.

“Survivors and advocates in Travis County in particular have been sounding the alarm – and they’ve been taking care of themselves for decades,” Meyers says. “And the one thing that that group can not do on its own - is prosecute cases.”

Written by Geronimo Perez.

Correction: A previous version of this post misspelled Elizabeth Myers' last name.

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit KUT 90.5.

As online editor for KUT News, Wells Dunbar covers news in Austin, Central Texas and beyond. Before joining the KUT family, Wells served as staff writer and news blog editor at The Austin Chronicle, and covered the Texas Legislature for Gallery Watch. Hailing from El Paso, Wells is a longtime Austin resident whose interests include technology and social media, film and music, and spending quality time with his wife and cat.
Texas Standard reporter Joy Diaz has amassed a lengthy and highly recognized body of work in public media reporting. Prior to joining Texas Standard, Joy was a reporter with Austin NPR station KUT on and off since 2005. There, she covered city news and politics, education, healthcare and immigration.