Air Force Gen.: Remove Sex Crime Cases from Chain of Command
Current system puts officers in charge of investigating their own men and women
As the president continues to press top military brass to stop sexual assaults and a third man in charge of sexual assault prevention is accused of misconduct, the Air Force chief of staff said he's open to doing what advocates have been suggesting for years: Removing the authority to prosecute sex crimes from the chain of command.
Currently, commanders are responsible for initiating courts-martial against alleged attackers in their own chain of command, and for reviewing the results of courts-martial. Victims and advocates say that system discourages victims from reporting and can lead to problems when the accused has a better reputation within the unit than the victim does.
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