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10 INICLR 457
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Indiana International & Comparative Law Review
2000
Comment
*457 SISTERS IN MISERY: UTILIZING INTERNATIONAL LAW TO PROTECT UNITED STATES
FEMALE PRISONERS FROM SEXUAL ABUSE
Delisa Springfield [FNa1]
Copyright © 2000 by the Trustees of Indiana University; Delisa Springfield
I. INTRODUCTION
[Robin's nightmare began on February 24, 1994, when the first-time offender] was halfway through a 33-month sentence for
credit card fraud at the Federal Correctional Institution in Dublin, California.... She complained when the prison authorities
put her and several other women in the men's "Secured Housing Unit (SHU)." But nothing happened to help her. Robin
complained she was visible to male inmates and guards 24 hours a day, including when using the toilet and when she was in
the shower. Still nothing happened. She complained that she was taunted because she was a lesbian: "Maybe we can change
your mind." She fought off one attacker in her cell with a broomstick. Still the prison officials did nothing. She gave a sworn
affidavit to the authorities naming a guard who sold entry to her cell to male inmates as well as one of her attackers. Still
nothing was done to protect her. Some time after midnight on September 25, 1995, three male inmates unlocked the door to
Robin's cell. She was handcuffed, then raped and sodomized, suffering severe injuries to her neck, arms, back, vaginal and
anal areas. Her attackers called her a "snitch," told her to "keep her mouth shut," and threatened her with continued attacks if
she kept complaining. [FN1]
Among the major dilemmas facing incarcerated females in the United States prisons are sexual abuse, rape, and assault. "Few
aspects of incarceration are more horrifying than the prospect of sexual exploitation and forcible rape within jail and prison
walls. [Prison sexual abuse] is a subject to which society reacts with a combination of fear, disgust, and denial." [FN2] Many
*458 women in United States prisons and jails are victims of sexual abuse by staff, including sexually offensive language,
male staff touching inmates' breasts and genitals when conducting searches, [FN3] male staff watching inmates while they
are naked, [FN4] and rape. [FN5] Despite these continual tortures and abuses, common law provides little or no remedy for
these women. Instead, many female prisoners are threatened with additional violence if they complain to anyone about the
abuse. [FN6] "Most officers will tell you, go ahead and tell--it's your word against mine. Who are they gonna believe? I'm an
officer, I have a badge on, I'm in a superior position to you." [FN7]
Women serving sentences in federal and state prisons find that they are being required to give up much more than their
freedom. [FN8] More than sixty-nine thousand women are prisoners in the United States, which is more than *459 a five
hundred percent increase since the 1980s. [FN9] "And [along] with the increase in numbers has come a decrease in rights."
[FN10] It is uncontested that female prisoners should lose some rights. However, the right to be treated with the respect and
dignity owed to any human being, and the right not to be subject to torture or cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment is
unconditional. [FN11]
Human rights violations are becoming a daily part of life for female inmates across the country. [FN12] The lack of oversight
and disciplinary actions on the part of those charged with the responsibility fuels the climate of sexual abuse by prison
guards. [FN13] Singer and actress Michelle Philips, at an Amnesty International press conference stated:
I cannot understand why female inmates are not protected from sexual assault in prison and why their jailers or male inmates
often attack them.... My question to the U.S. government and the American people is how can we demand that other countries
respect the human rights of their citizens when we don't respect them ourselves. [FN14]
The sexual assaults against imprisoned women continually increase despite *460 extensive human rights legislation and laws
proscribing such treatment both nationally and internationally. [FN15]
The international community extended its protection against cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment or punishment,

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including sexual violations against women in prisons, by establishing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women. [FN16] The United Nations (U.N.) Declaration defines violence
against women as "any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or psychological
harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in
public or in private life." [FN17]
International standards attempt worldwide consensus toward the preservation of human equality and dignity. [FN18] The
United States and other nations began recognizing the need for international protection with the adoption of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights by the United Nations. [FN19] Consequently, "the attitude of the international community
toward *461 the treatment of prisoners has evolved into a formal recognition of basic prisoners' rights." [FN20] The United
States ratified international conventions and covenants [FN21] which can be used to protect women from sexual violence
occurring in U.S. prisons. [FN22]
In 1900, the United States Supreme Court clarified that it would enforce the dictates of international law, stating that:
"International law is part of our law and must be ascertained and administered by courts of justice of appropriate jurisdiction
as often as questions of right depending on it are duly presented for their determination." [FN23]
Under the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (Convention
Against Torture) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the rape of a female prisoner by a
correctional officer constitutes torture, and sexual abuse violates the right to be treated with respect for human dignity and the
right to privacy. [FN24] The United States ratified the ICCPR in 1992 and the Convention Against Torture in 1994. [FN25]
The United States must use international laws to its advantage by first recognizing the assault of female inmates as the human
rights abuses they are and then drawing upon them for inmates' protection.
*462 Part II of this Note discusses the background of violence, retaliation, and pervasive sexual abuse aimed toward female
inmates in U.S. prisons, citing prison statistics as well as discussing the background history of women prisoners. Part III
explores why the sexual misconduct and abuse occurring in United States prisons constitute rape, torture and inhumane
treatment, so as to fall within the purview of international law. Part IV chronicles the use of international human rights law to
protect female inmates from sexual misconduct and abuse, specifically focusing on the Convention Against Torture and the
IICPR, the United States' ratification of both laws, and the application of the international human rights issues to prisoners.
Part IV further explores what role these international laws play in protecting United States female prisoners from rape, other
sexual assault, sexual extortion, and groping during body searches. Part V discusses briefly the international human rights
standards in China and its application of international human rights laws. Finally, Part VI details recommendations for
solutions to the abuse problem in the United States.
II. A BACKGROUND OF FEMALE SEXUAL ABUSE IN UNITED STATES PRISONS
Each day, females incarcerated in United States prisons face rape, sexual assault, and other abuse. [FN26] "Rape in prison is
hardly new--but with more and more women doing time, the Big House is being transformed into a veritable rape camp."
[FN27] For many years, the United States court system neglected sexual abuse against female prisoners, refusing to
recognize the serious human rights violations involved. [FN28]
Further, the extensive abuse of female prisoners rarely received national attention until seven or eight years ago. [FN29]
Eventually, incidents of prison staff sexually molesting and assaulting female inmates started gaining attention. [FN30]
"Numerous female inmates in three Washington, D.C. prison and jail facilities [described being] awakened at two or three in
the morning for a [medical ... or legal visit] only to be led into the kitchen, the clinic, the visiting hall, or a *463 closet to [be
raped]." [FN31] Additionally, facilities denying conjugal visits had inmates that still became pregnant. [FN32] "The sex
involved not just correctional officers. It involved chaplains, administration, deputy wardens, contractors, and food service
workers ... [including] female staff." [FN33]
As the sexual abuse of female inmates raced to the forefront of America's consciousness, the female inmate population
steadily increased. [FN34] Alarming statistics show approximately 138,000 women are currently incarcerated in United
States jails and prisons. [FN35] Incarcerated females in United States prisons come from extremely diverse backgrounds, and
they are confined for various criminal and civil offenses. [FN36] Most female inmates are incarcerated for nonviolent crimes
and have minimal or no prior criminal history. [FN37] Occasionally, women enter correctional facilities pregnant and give
birth while serving their sentences. [FN38]

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*464 In addition, the majority of women are in prison for economic crimes. The most typical convictions include property
crimes, such as check forgery and illegal credit card use. [FN39] However, many women are also incarcerated for drug
related offenses. [FN40] Moreover, many women committing violent crimes were defending themselves or their children
from abusive husbands, fathers, and lovers. [FN41] The women overcrowding United States prisons may remind us of
ourselves, and are similar to mothers, [FN42] daughters, and sisters that we interact with every day who have found
themselves in egregious situations.
Another equally alarming statistic indicates that seventy percent of the correctional officers in women's prisons are male.
[FN43] As a result, male correctional officials often watch women undressing in the shower, or on the toilet.
No certain type of woman becomes the target for sexual assaults, but several factors, such as age, sexual orientation, and race
play significant roles. [FN44] Particularly vulnerable, first-time, young, or mentally ill prisoners often suffer more sexual
misconduct. [FN45] Lesbians and transgendered prisoners *465 find themselves singled out by officers because of the
prisoners' sexual preferences. [FN46] Prison staffs pressure female inmates into sexual relations by depriving them of
necessary feminine needs, withholding privileges, and granting extra favors to those who cooperate. [FN47] Often, because
the female prisoner completely depends upon the correctional officers for basic necessities, the threat of withholding these
items leaves the inmate feeling that she has no other choice but sexual submission. [FN48]
A. Retaliation
The exact number of sexually assaulted female prisoners is unknown. [FN49] Generally, ongoing sexual assaults go
unreported. [FN50] Human Rights Watch reported the Department of Justice's finding that fear of retaliation prompted
female inmates not to report abuse. [FN51] One report states:
There's a Bosnia-like epidemic of rape and psychosexual torture going on inside America's prisons. In public and private
facilities across the United States, female inmates are routinely forced into performing strip teases, lap dances and sexual
favors. They are raped regularly by guards, medical *466 staff and even male prisoners-who pay corrections officers for
access to women inmates housed in adjoining prison wings. [FN52]
Female inmates are left to the mercy of the correctional officers once they decide to report an assault. Thus, inmates fear
reporting assaults. [FN53] Often, the prisoner's allegations are not believed, and she simply returns to an environment where
she faces retaliation from her abuser for speaking out. [FN54] This leads to many female inmates serving their sentences in
silence and submission, merely perpetuating the abusive behavior.
Retaliation by a correctional officer can consist of verbal harassment, [FN55] intimidation, abusive pat-downs, denial of
privileges, [FN56] rape, sodomization, and physical abuse. In many states, guards can access and are encouraged to review
the inmates' personal history files. Inmates' files usually include complaints they reported against officers or other prison
authorities. [FN57] "By leaking [this] private information ... prison officials coerce women prisoners and staff into silence
and insulate themselves from scrutiny." [FN58] In addition, allowing access and review of files creates a "chilling effect" on
inmates reporting abuses. [FN59]
"As ... guards wield near-absolute power over the women, retaliation can be devastating to the women's security, health, and
psychological well- *467 being." [FN60] The Human Rights Watch's [FN61] 1996 and 1998 reports [FN62] detailed the
terrifying experience of being a female inmate in a U.S. prison. [FN63] The Human Rights Watch report discusses that a
large number of women who complained experienced retaliation from the accused officers, their colleagues, or other inmates.
[FN64] Additionally, the report stated that the Department of Justice should thoroughly investigate any complaints received
by correction departments. [FN65]
The report further discussed retaliation methods, such as guards sexually and physically assaulting prisoners involved in legal
action against the Department of Corrections and confiscating legal mail as contraband; guards subjecting prisoners to
unnecessarily intrusive body searches; guards verbally harassing inmates and threatening them with physical or sexual abuse;
and staff falsely reporting inmate misconduct. [FN66] An unfortunate consequence reported is that "[i]f a guard has been
reported by an inmate for sexual abuse, he may turn to his colleagues for assistance in retaliating against her." [FN67]
Retaliation of this nature creates difficulty for correctional facilities too since no link may exist between the retaliatory
behavior of one guard and the actions of a separate guard carrying out his duties. [FN68]
Further, United States courts have treated sexual assaults against women prisoners with leniency; [FN69] thus, "correction[al]

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employees continue to engage in abuse because they believe they will rarely be held accountable, administratively, civilly, or
criminally." [FN70] "Prisoner rape [and sexual assault] *468 is aided and abetted by a legal system in which inmates are
deemed incurable criminals, forever guilty until proven innocent." [FN71] The United States court system routinely places
some of the responsibility and blame on the inmates themselves. [FN72] This leaves female inmates with further feelings of
violation, guilt, fear, and shame.
This may lead to the question of why other correctional officers do not speak out about the retaliation and sexual abuse.
Unfortunately, officers wishing to do so often face the prospects of losing their job, physical harm, or their supervisor setting
them up and getting them fired. [FN73]
"By failing to monitor vigorously for retaliatory behavior and disciplin[ing] guards and employees who participate in
retaliatory behavior, the correction's department sends a message to both the women and the guards that correction's
employees may abuse, harass, threaten, and harm women with impunity." [FN74] Sadly, this leaves female inmates with no
power over the correctional officers, and inmates continue to serve sentences suffering worse treatment and more severe
abuse after reporting their attackers.
*469 II. SEXUAL MISCONDUCT AND RAPE AS TORTURE
Rape occurs in every prison system in every state, every city, and every town. [FN75] Inmate rape victims are being denied
potential legal protections and remedies that unincarcerated women possess. Rape is defined as the unlawful carnal
knowledge of a woman by a man, forcibly and against her will, or without her consent. [FN76] Rape is primarily directed
toward women; thus, women are acutely vulnerable. [FN77] Between June 1990 and October 1991, 1.3 million American
women became victims of rape or attempted rape. [FN78] In 1990, the number of rapes rose faster than the rate of any other
major crime. [FN79]
In most cases, men rape out of anger and a need to overpower, dominate, and humiliate. [FN80] However, correctional
officers perpetrating sexual assault control daily nearly every aspect of the inmate's life. [FN81] "[Officers] have used their
near total authority to provide or deny goods and privileges to female prisoners to compel them to have sex or, in other cases,
to reward them for having done so." [FN82] Regrettably, for female inmates, rape cannot always be avoided regardless of the
precautions taken. [FN83]
*470 Women experience different conditions upon incarceration than men. [FN84] In Jordan v. Gardner the court stated
women's reactions to rape and searches by male guards are different because most women have been sexually abused before
coming to prison. [FN85] However, the majority of male rapes occur in prisons and other correctional facilities. [FN86]
Thus, women entering prison have a greater fear of being sexually assaulted since they are disproportionately victims of such
crimes. [FN87] "Men are rarely victims of sexual assault, [and] may view sexual conduct in a vacuum without a full
appreciation of the ... underlying threats of violence that a woman may perceive." [FN88] Although many people argue that
the causes of and *471 reasons for rape remain deeply entrenched in America's social structure, [FN89] "[t]he time has come
for international human rights law to recognize the pervasiveness and severity of rape and to punish, rather than forgive, the
torturer and to compensate, rather than forget, the rape survivor." [FN90]
"Recent developments recognize rape as among the worst human rights violations." [FN91] Research demonstrates that rape
victims regularly suffer from rape trauma syndrome, [FN92] which is similar to Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
[FN93] PTSD symptoms are similar to the psychological distress associated with many torture survivors' experiences. [FN94]
The severe suffering caused by rape is comparable to that inflicted by torture, which would justify treating rape as torture
under international law. [FN95]
Further, national classifications of torture fail to distinguish torture from what female inmates currently face. [FN96] When
asked to explain the rape crisis, Jimmie Williams, Communications Director for the Washington, D.C. corrections
department, accepts it as a part of prison life, responding: "I don't think anyone can answer that question. It happens in
prisons all across *472 America ... sex is a normal part of prison life.... It's not proper, but it happens." [FN97] Dr. William F.
Schultz, Executive Director of Amnesty International USA, disagreed, stating that "[s]exual abuse of women inmates is
torture, plain and simple." [FN98]
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture [FN99] recognizes that rape can constitute torture. The Rapporteur stated

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that "rape is a traumatic form of torture for the victim." [FN100] The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights [FN101]
also recently recognized rape as a form of torture.
The abuse and punishment that female inmates face is far in excess of their state-imposed sentences. "[I]n a custodial setting,
if a guard uses force ... or other means of coercion to compel a prisoner to engage in sexual intercourse ... including
aggressively squeezing, groping, or prodding women's genitals or breasts ... [these acts] amount to torture." [FN102]
III. INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE PROTECTION OF FEMALE INMATES
A. International Law: Treaties, Reservations, and Ratifications
International law imposes upon nations certain duties with respect to individuals and incorporates rules and principles which
govern the relationship between nations and how they deal with each other. [FN103] "The 1969 Vienna Convention on the
Law of Treaties is the central source of *473 international law on treaties." [FN104] The Vienna Convention codified
language on how participating states should handle treaty application, observance, interpretation, reservations, and
termination. [FN105]
However, states voluntarily sign and enter into treaties, [FN106] which do not become binding law until they are ratified.
[FN107]
Once a state has signed and ratified a treaty, a problem may arise with some states reservations made within the treaty.
[FN108] Section 2, Articles 19 through 23 of the Vienna Convention deals with treaty reservations. [FN109] One of the
primary reasons for treaty reservations in human rights documents is states' domestic legislation and the treaty's international
requirements. [FN110] Article 19 of the Vienna Convention provides that "[a] state may ... formulate a reservation unless ...
the reservation is incompatible with the object and purpose of the treaty." [FN111] United States' reservations to any treaty it
has become a signator to should not restrict or lessen any fundamental human rights recognized or existing in a State.
B. Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners
The international community has extended its protection against cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,
including sexual violations against women in prisons. [FN112] In 1957, the United Nations Economic and *474 Social
Council [FN113] (ECOSOC) formally approved the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners
[FN114] ("Standard Minimum Rules"), which constitute an international guide toward the treatment of prisoners. "The
primary goal of establishing the Standard Minimum Rules was to encourage their enactment in national penal codes."
[FN115]
The Standard Minimum Rules can be found in United States criminal laws under the 1962 Model Penal Code, [FN116] and
in the correctional standards developed by the National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals in
1973. [FN117] "A few U.S. states have adopted the Rules as a 'Bill of Rights' for the treatment of prisoners." [FN118]
Regrettably, these integrations of the Standard Minimum Rules achieve nothing if the United States does not ensure their
implementation nationally in its prisons and jails.
The Standard Minimum Rules contain provisions specifically related to women. [FN119] Rule 53(2) provides that "[n]o male
member of the staff shall enter the part of the institution set aside for women unless accompanied by a woman officer."
[FN120] Rule 53(3) provides that "[w]omen prisoners shall be attended and supervised only by women officers ...." [FN121]
Additionally, Rule 36(3) ensures *475 prisoners the right to make a request or complaint, without censorship as to substance
but in proper form, to the central prison administration, the judicial authority, or other proper authorities, through approved
channels. [FN122]
The Standard Minimum Rules' protection can be interpreted to mean that the violation of one's human rights constitutes
torture; thus, since the sexual abuse of women inmates is a human rights violation, it is also torture. [FN123] Furthermore,
these standards and rules are derived from the idea of universal human rights and an international responsibility to ensure
those rights. [FN124] However, the ECOSOC's rules do not bind the United States since they have no legislative authority.
[FN125] Acceptance by the United Nations and approval by ECOSOC is insufficient to give the Standard Minimum Rules
the force of law. [FN126]

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C. The Convention Against Torture
The United Nations Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
("Convention Against Torture") opened for signature in 1984.[FN127]
The Convention Against Torture significantly encompasses prisoners' rights, since most torture victims are imprisoned or
otherwise detained. [FN128] *476 Torture inflicts intense suffering, forcing individuals to act against their will. [FN129] The
Convention Against Torture reaffirms all torture acts or other cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment or punishment as
offenses against human dignity. [FN130] The Convention Against Torture defines torture to be:
any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes
as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has
committed, or intimidating him or a third person, or for any other reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain
or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person
acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful
sanctions. [FN131]
The Convention Against Torture requires governments to prohibit torture. [FN132] Typically, sanctions are used to enforce
convention provisions. However, the Convention Against Torture uses "moral [per]suasion and exposure to adverse public
opinion." [FN133] Initially, parties to the Convention Against Torture submit yearly reports, and then submission is required
every four years. These reports detail countries' actions toward meeting obligations that the Convention Against Torture
outlines. [FN134] Mandatory governmental investigation is required whenever reasonable grounds surface detailing that
*477 acts of torture are being committed. [FN135] "Unless the human rights of women, as defined by international human
rights instruments, are fully recognized and effectively protected, applied, implemented and enforced in national law as well
as in national practice ... they will exist in name only." [FN136] The Convention requires that effective measures preventing
torture from being inflicted be taken and forbids parties from justifying these acts. [FN137] The Convention Against Torture
provides that raping an incarcerated female in United States prison is torture. [FN138]
The United States ratified the Convention Against Torture in October 1994, and the Convention entered into force for the
United States on November 20, 1994. [FN139] However, the United States made a reservation to Article XVI [FN140]
obligating itself only insofar as the Fourth, [FN141] Eighth, [FN142] and/or Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution prohibit cruel, *478 unusual, or inhumane treatment. [FN143] A United States Foreign Relations Committee
report stated that "degrading treatment or punishment ... has been interpreted as potentially including treatment that would
probably not be prohibited by the U.S. Constitution. [Thus, the United States feels it is necessary to make sure that it]
construes the phrase to be coextensive with its constitutional guarantees." [FN144] The Human Rights Watch report stated
the opinion that in partially ratifying the Convention Against Torture, the United States "shirk[ed] its full international human
rights obligations [and such action was] both bad policy and legally indefensible." [FN145] With this partial ratification, the
United States falls far short of ensuring the protections provided under international law. The United States was due to report
in 1995 on its implementation of the Treaty requirements to the Committee Against Torture, [FN146] which monitors
implementation of the Convention Against Torture. [FN147] As of January 1999, it had not done so. [FN148]
The United States ratified the Convention Against Torture mainly due to its international position regarding human rights.
However, the United States' reservation creates a loophole through which constant abuse and torture continue to occur in its
prisons. [FN149]
D. International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) is the principal international treaty setting out fundamental
civil and political rights *479 for all people. [FN150] The Treaty legally requires one hundred forty nations to protect the
human rights of its citizens. [FN151]
Effective in 1976, [FN152] the ICCPR requires state parties to protect against slavery and cruel, inhuman, or degrading
treatment. [FN153] The Covenant also protects individual privacy. Article 17 protects individuals against interference with
their privacy and states, "[n]o one shall be subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with their privacy ...." [FN154]
Therefore, subjecting female inmates to intrusive body searches and pat frisks by male guards violates Article 17.
The ICCPR provides implementation powers and is a strong vehicle advancing the concerns of women. [FN155] Article 19

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states, "everyone shall have the right to freedom of expression; this right shall include freedom to seek, receive and impart
information and ideas of all kinds ...." [FN156] Punishing inmates for filing grievances against correctional employees is a
freedom of expression violation, prohibited by the Covenant. [FN157] Additionally, Article 10 provides that "all persons
deprived of their liberty shall be treated with humanity and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person."
[FN158] Thus custodial sexual abuse, retaliation, or any degradation upon female inmates violates their right to be treated
with respect, their right to privacy, and their right to be treated humanely.
*480 The United States ratified the ICCPR on June 8, 1992, [FN159] but reserved implementing certain provisions or either
restricting its application. [FN160] The Human Rights Committee [FN161] stated that the "United States reservation to
Article 7 [was] incompatible with the object and purpose of the Covenant." [FN162] Under the Optional Protocol [FN163] to
the ICCPR, the Human Rights Committee considers individual human rights complaints by governmental parties. [FN164]
Ninety-two governments agreed to be Protocol participants. [FN165] The United States did not adopt the Optional Protocol.
[FN166]
Sexual abuse violates the right to be treated with respect and the right to privacy. Those rights are protected by the ICCPR.
[FN167] The United States must undertake an effort respecting female inmates' rights to privacy and dignity. The United
States must ratify the Covenant completely and recognize that the abuse, rape, and torture situations female prisoners face
constitute serious human rights violations.
E. People's Republic of China
The United States is not alone in its lack of protection for female prisoners. The People's Republic of China ("PRC") also
falls short of the standards mandated by the Convention Against Torture. [FN168] The PRC adopted *481 its Prison Law in
1994. [FN169] The law provides that prison police shall not mistreat or subject prisoners to indignity without facing charges
for commission of a crime. [FN170] While Chinese law stipulates that women must be supervised by women guards, some
women's prisons employ both male and female guards. [FN171] During interrogations and other periods of incarceration,
male guards often gain private access to female inmates. [FN172] Furthermore, Chinese women reported being sexually
abused by male inmates who obtained the keys from guards. [FN173] Inmates reported that male guards frequented female
holding areas despite the regulations. [FN174] The PRC ratified the Convention Against Torture in 1988 [FN175] and has yet
to ratify the ICCPR. [FN176] The PRC perceives torture much more narrowly than does the Convention Against Torture.
[FN177] Human Rights in China [FN178] and other human rights organizations believe the Chinese government takes
insufficient efforts to ensure the human rights of Chinese women. [FN179]
PRC representatives informed the Committee Against Torture that the PRC's domestic law lined up with the Convention
Against Torture requirements. [FN180] However, the PRC's revised Criminal Procedure Law refuses *482 to make evidence
produced through torture inadmissible in court, [FN181] and female detainees continually face torture and sexual abuse with
electric batons and sticks. [FN182] "Women are not protected by the gender of their assailants: both female and male
wardens are reported to have committed such acts." [FN183] The Chinese media only recently recognized the sexual abuse
and molestation perpetrated on female prisoners. [FN184]
Implementations of existing Chinese legal torture standards are severely hindered by: 1) political control of the judiciary;
[FN185] 2) inadequate monitoring mechanisms and procedures; 3) evidence obtained through torture being admissible in
courts; 4) denying defendants communication with family or lawyers before trial; 5) censoring the news media concerning
legal matters and law enforcement; and 6) widespread use of administrative detention. [FN186]
Similar to implementation procedures needed in the United States, the Chinese government must implement legal standards
and requirements protecting female detainees from abuse. Additionally, "[i]nstituting real protections for the human rights of
Chinese women will require the establishment of an independent, impartial judicial and legal system." [FN187] Both the
United States and Chinese governments continually fail to treat women's rights as human rights. Each country must
affirmatively take steps to protect women against rape, sexual assault, and abuse in their detention facilities.
IV. RECOMMENDATIONS
Both sexual abuse committed by prison staff and retaliation against women who report abuses are clearly prohibited pursuant
to U.S. *483 Constitutional law and binding international treaty law. [FN188] Human Rights Watch made the following
recommendations to Congress and the Department of Justice in its report:

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To the U.S. Congress
1. [P]ass legislation that requires states, as a precondition to receiving federal funding for the construction and maintenance
of state prisons and holding cells, to criminalize all sexual contact between corrections staff and prisoners and, as discussed
below, to report annually to the [Department of Justice] regarding conditions of incarceration in their respective facilities.
2. [P]ass legislation that requires states to prohibit departments of corrections from hiring staff who have been convicted on
criminal charges, or found liable in civil suits, for custodial sexual misconduct. The names and identifying information of
such individuals should be maintained by each department of corrections in a database that must be checked prior to hiring
any correctional staff. This information should be collected by the [Department of Justice] data collection office, discussed
below, for use by all states.
3. [A]ppropriate the funds necessary to enable the [Department of Justice] to conduct increased and thorough investigations
of custodial sexual misconduct ....
***
6. [W]ithdraw the restrictive reservations, declarations, and understandings that the [United States] has attached to the
[International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights] and the [Convention Against Torture].
7. [I]ntroduce implementing legislation for the [International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights] and the [Convention
Against Torture] such that persons in the United States could legally enforce the protections of these treaties in U.S. courts;
or it should formally declare that both treaties are self-executing and thus capable of sustaining claims in U.S. courts without
further legislation.
*484 To the U.S. Department of Justice (Civil Rights Division)
1. [A]s a necessary step toward improving its responsiveness to sexual misconduct and the quality of its information about
same, should establish a secure, toll-free telephone hotline to receive complaints of sexual misconduct by correctional staff
and publicize the existence of this service.
***
6. [R]equire states, as a condition of continued federal assistance, to report annually to the Civil Rights Division regarding
conditions of incarceration in their respective correctional facilities. Such reports should include, among other things, patterns
of rape, sexual abuse, and other forms of violence against women. The [Department] should publish an annual report based
upon this information.
7. [A]ppoint an attorney within its Special Litigation section responsible for overseeing all complaints of sexual misconduct
lodged with the section.
To the U.S. Deptartment of Justice (National Institute of Corrections)
[D]evelop standards akin to the U.N.'s Standard Minimum Rules, in order to provide national guidelines for the treatment of
prisoners to ensure that state corrections procedure and practice comport with the international and constitutional protections.
[FN189]
Additionally, Amnesty International made the following recommendations relating to international commitments and the
protection of female inmates:
A. Only female officers should guard female inmates. Female officers should always accompany male staff who provide
professional services in female facilities.
B. All staff and inmates should be informed that sexual abuse is prohibited and those inmates have a right to complain if they
are abused. Staff has a duty to report if they know that an inmate has been abused.
*485 C. Sexual abuse of inmates by staff should be expressly prohibited and action taken against staff who sexually abuse
inmates. Sexual abuse should be widely defined to include sexual assault and threatened sexual assault; sexual contact, and
sexually explicit language and gestures.
D. Authorities need to immediately recognize that sexual abuse constitutes torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment.
E. Ratify in all forms without reservations, the human rights treaties that it has not yet ratified. In particular the Convention
on the Elimination on All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, the Inter- American Convention on the Prevention,
Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Woman and the American Convention on Human Rights
F. Submit to the international monitoring bodies the USA's overdue reports on its implementation of the Convention Against
Torture

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G. Inmates and staff who report abuses should be protected from retaliation by measures including: [I]nmates and staff must
be informed that they have a right to protection from retaliation; as far as practicable, reports of abuse by inmates and staff
should be treated in strict confidence; disciplinary and/or legal action, as appropriate, should be taken against any member of
the staff who seeks to deter inmates and staff from reporting abuse or who, in any manner, harasses or intimidates inmates or
staff who report abuses. [FN190]
V. CONCLUSION
Somewhere along the line, the boundaries between punishment and abuse to women behind bars became blurred. The
prevalence of abuse in women's prisons mandates further needed protection. The United States has the opportunity to take a
concentrated step toward protecting these women by ratifying both the Convention Against Torture and the Political
Covenant without any reservations. However, even if the United States wholly ratifies these agreements, it must still take
extra steps.
*486 The United States must allow for some type of reporting mechanism for abused female inmates which precludes the
possibility of retaliation by correctional officers. Otherwise, the behavior of those in complete authority over the powerless
will remain insulated from the justice system's reach, and the system of torture will self-perpetuate. Also, both the United
States federal system and state system that do not currently have laws against "consensual sexual contact" must realize that
any sexual contact between correctional officers and prisoners constitutes abuse.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch recommend measures that establish a clear path for the United States to
follow in protecting female inmates. The suggestions of these organizations set out the crucial steps the United States
requires to enforce laws against correctional officers and others who continually violate women in our prisons. These women
prisoners ask nothing less than their right to be treated like human beings--a God-given right. However, because these women
have committed crimes and are imprisoned, they have somehow become less than human in the eyes of not only their
abusers, but in the eyes of the criminal justice system as well.
[FNa1]. J.D. Candidate, 2001, Indiana University School of Law-- Indianapolis; B.S., 1991, Southern Illinois Universiaty at
Edwardsville. Special thanks to my mother, family members, and close friends for all your continual prayers, support, and
encouragement.
[FN1]. Amnesty International website, Not Part of My Sentence: Violations of the Human Rights of Women in Custody,
(Mar. 4, 1999) Factsheets, page 3 (visited Sept. 16, 1999) <http://www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/fact
sheets/discrimination.html>. This report focuses upon the prevalent sexual abuse and human rights violations committed
against female prisoners in the United States.
[FN2]. Brief of Stop Prisoner Rape, Inc. at § A, Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825 (1994), available in Prisoner Assault is
Widespread (visited Oct. 30, 1999) <http://www.spr.org/docs/farmer/argument.html#a.> [hereinafter SPR Brief]. Stop
Prisoner Rape, Inc. (SPR) is a small but growing national non- profit organization dedicated to combating the rape of male
and female prisoners and to helping survivors of jailhouse rape.
[FN3]. See Lisa Krim, Essay, A Reasonable Woman's Version of Cruel and Unusual Punishment: Cross-Gender,
Clothed-Body Searches of Women Prisoners, 6 UCLA WOMEN'S L. J. 85, 86 (Fall 1995).
[FN4]. See York v. Story, 324 F.2d 450, 455 (9th Cir. 1963) ("The desire to shield one's unclothed figure from views of
strangers, and particularly strangers of the opposite sex, is impelled by elementary self-respect and personal dignity."); but cf.
Canedy v. Boardman, 801 F. Supp. 254 (W.D. Wis. 1992), rev'd, 16 F.3d 183 (7th Cir. 1994) (stating that male inmates do
not possess a privacy right protecting against being viewed while nude by guards of the opposite sex).
[FN5]. See HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH WOMEN'S RIGHTS PROJECT, All Too Familiar: Sexual Abuse of Women in U.S.
State Prisons, New York, Dec. 1996 [hereinafter All Too Familiar]. This report documents pervasive sexual abuse and
privacy violations by guards and other correctional department employees in state prisons in California, the District of
Columbia, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan and New York. See id. The report exposed states' failures to respond to sexual abuse
and harassment. See id. See Women Behind Bars: Female Prisoners, AMERICA, May 1, 1999 [hereinafter Women Behind
Bars].

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[FN6].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/report/women-25.html>; HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH, Nowhere to Hide:
Retaliation Against Women in Michigan State Prisons, Vol. 10, No. 2(G) (1998) (visited Sept. 16, 1999) <http://
www.hrw.org/reports98/women> (discussing intense retaliatory behavior by corrections guards and staff against female
inmates in Michigan) [hereinafter Nowhere to Hide]. This report defined retaliation as "any act by a corrections officer,
corrections employee, or official aimed at an inmate in order to punish her for having reported abuse or in order to keep her
from reporting abuse." Id. at § III.
[FN7].
See
Amnesty
International
website,
Stories
at
4
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/stories/index.html>, reported by Elizabeth Bouchard speaking on the radio,
by telephone from Framingham prison (WBUR (Boston University) broadcast, Here and Now, Oct. 16, 1998).
[FN8]. The continual sexual assault and surrender of female inmates to this type of abuse is becoming a "common law" part
of their prison sentences. "Federal and state laws govern the establishment and administration of prisons ... and the rights of
inmates. [However, it is the same federal and state laws in place for their protection that are condemning them to abuse]."
Legal Information Institute, Prisons and Prisoner's Rights: An Overview (visited Oct. 29, 1999)
<http://www.law.cornell.edu/topics/prisoners_ rights.html>. "[A female prisoner] does not have full constitutional rights,
[however, s]he is protected by the constitution's prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment (see Amendment VIII)." Id. It
has been determined that the Equal Protection Clause enumerated in 14th Amendment applies to prison inmates. See id.
[FN9]. See Bureau of Justice Statistics, Press Release, The Nation's Prison Population Grew by 60,000 Inmates Last Year,
the Largest Increase Since 1995, Aug. 15, 1999. In 1998, the federal prison population grew by almost sixty thousand
inmates. See id. The rate of women incarcerated increased 6.5%, exceeding that of men which increased only 4.7%. See id.
See Bobbie Stein, Sexual Abuse: Guards Let Rapists into Women's Cells, THE PROGRESSIVE 23 (1996).
[FN10]. Stein, supra note 9.
[FN11]. See Nan D. Miller, Comment, International Protection of the Rights of Prisoners: Is Solitary Confinement in the
United States a Violation of International Standards?, 26 CAL. W. INT'L L.J. 139 (1995). When the United Nations drafted
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Organization of American States adopted the American Declaration of the
Rights and Duties of Man. Id. at 143. The American Declaration was not intended to be legally binding. See id. In pertaining
to prisoners, the American Declaration provides that every individual has the right to humane treatment during custody and
no accused is to receive cruel or unusual punishment. See id.
[FN12].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/overview.html>. "Three international human rights groups have criticized our
country for turning our women's prisons into peep shows and whorehouses." Geraldo Rivera, Women in Prison: Nowhere to
Hide (NBC television broadcast, Sept. 10, 1999) available at <http:// www.msnbc.com/news/309802.asp>. Mr. Rivera
explored the growing problems women face while serving time in prison, their rejection by United States courts, and the lack
of medical care available. See id.
[FN13]. See id.
[FN14]. Media statement of Michelle Phillips at Amnesty International's Not Part of My Sentence Press Conference (Mar. 4,
1999) available at <http:// www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/conference/michelle.html>.
[FN15]. See Steven A. Holmes, Rape of Women Prisoners Increasing: Groups Say They Try to Help Win Some Cases, but
Prisons Often Say Sex Was Consensual, DALLAS MORNING NEWS, Jan. 19, 1997, available in 1997 WL 2640195. This
article reported an incident where a prison guard raped a female inmate and then tossed his used condom on the bed and told
her to flush it down the toilet. See also Eric Harrison, Nearly 200 Women Have Told of Being Raped, Abused in a Georgia
Prison Scandal So Broad Even Officials Say It's ... A 13- Year Nightmare, LOS ANGELES TIMES, Dec. 30, 1992 (detailing
incidences where guards not only photographed women engaged in sex acts, they took inmates off the grounds to work as
prostitutes). The alleged abuses discussed in the article go back as far as 1979. See id. See also Beth Stephens, Problems of
Proving International Human Rights Law in U.S. Courts: Litigating Customary International Human Rights Norms, 25 GA.
J. INT'L & COMP. L. 191 (1996) (noting that international law has begun to recognize violence against women as a human
rights violation).

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[FN16]. See Universal Declaration of Human Rights, G.A. Res. 217A (III), U.N. GAOR, 3rd Sess., U.N. Doc. A/810, Dec.
10, 1948. The United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted the Declaration, which articulated fundamental
human rights for all and provided a worldwide standard for the preservation of human equality and dignity. See Hurst
Hannum, The Status and Future of the Customary International Law of Human Rights: The Status of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights in National and International Law, 25 GA. J. INT'L & COMP. L. 287 (1996) (stating that the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights has become incorporated into customary international law binding on all states);
Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women, G.A. Res. 180, U.N. GAOR, 34th Sess., Supp. No. 46, U.N.
Doc. 46/A/34/46 (1980). The Declaration was entered into force on Sept. 3, 1981. See id. It created a reporting procedure
requiring signatories to submit information about action taken concerning remedying discrimination against women. See id.
The Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women was the first international human rights instrument which
exclusively and explicitly addressed the issue of violence against women.
[FN17]. See Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women, supra note 16, art. 1.
[FN18]. See Universal Declaration of Human Rights, supra note 16, art. 2.
[FN19]. See id. For a discussion on international human rights law and how these laws apply to American jurisprudence, see
William D. Auman, International Human Rights Law: A Development Overview and Domestic Application Within the U.S.
Criminal Justice System, 20 N.C. CENT. L.J. 1 (1992). A declaration is merely a general statement of intent or principle
declared by a group or organization. See id. at 7. It is not necessarily signed, ratified or adopted by individual nations. See id.
[FN20]. See Suzanne M. Bernard, An Eye for an Eye: The Current Status of International Law on the Humane Treatment of
Prisoners, 25 RUTGERS L.J. 759, 761 (1994).
[FN21]. Dissimilar to declarations, covenants or conventions legally bind governments who sign and ratify them. Auman,
supra note 19, at 8. Therefore, a government which signs a convention or covenant only signifies an intention to ratify, but is
not bound until the treaty's ratification. See id.
[FN22]. See Amnesty International website, United States of America, Rights For All (visited Nov. 12, 1999)
<http://www.rightsforall- usa.org/info/report/r02-htm>. Since many human rights standards adopted by the international
community are not treaties, they have little legal power. See id. However, since governments must first negotiate the treaties
and then have the treaties adopted by their political bodies, the treaty is provided certain moral force. See id. Additionally, the
U.N. Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment also contains
standards on how prisoners should be treated. See id.
[FN23]. Kathleen M. Keller, A Comparative and International Law Perspective on the United States (Non) Compliance with
its
Duty
of
Non-Refoulement,
1
YALE
HUM.
RTS.
DEV.
L.J.
2,
¶51
(1999)
<http://
diana.law.yale.edu/yhrdlj/vol02/keller_kathleen_note.htm#p051> (stating that customary international law is now considered
a type of federal common law which is supreme over state law based on Article VI of the Constitution); see also The Paquete
Habana, 175 U.S. 677 (1900) (holding that international law is a part of United States law).
[FN24].
See
Amnesty
International
website,
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/report/women-01.html>.
[FN25].
See
Amnesty
International
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women-002.html>.

website

(visited

Sept.

(visited

16,
Sept.

1999)
1999)

<http://
<http://

[FN26]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 25. Sexual abuse persists because women feel useless to complain.
See id. The continued rapid growth of the female inmate population compounds the sexual abuse. See id.
[FN27]. Christopher D. Cook & Christian Parenti, Rape Camp USA, INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS 14, Dec. 27,
1998.
[FN28]. See id. The 1996 Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) requires inmates to pay exorbitant court fees to file suit and
imposes stiff penalties for sloppy lawsuits. See id. This law chills drastically the female inmates who attempt to combat
sexual abuse and violence. See id.

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[FN29]. See Nina Siegal, Stopping Abuse in Prison: Widespread Sexual Abuse of Women Prisoners, THE PROGRESSIVE,
Apr. 1, 1999. Incidences of female inmates being molested by prison staff gained attention through human-rights groups,
legal cases brought by the inmates and a shift in governmental policy. See id.
[FN30]. See id.
[FN31]. Id.
[FN32]. See id.
[FN33]. Id.
[FN34]. See U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Special Report: Survey of State Prison Inmates, 1991,
NCJ-145321 (Mar. 1994) [hereinafter Special Report, Survey]. The Bureau of Justice Statistics conducted a 1991 survey of
inmates in 277 state correctional facilities nationwide. See id.
[FN35].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/factsheets/assault.html>. The number of women in state prisons grew 75% from
year-end 1986 to year-end 1991, reaching almost 39,000 by June 1991. See Special Report, Survey, supra note 34. The
number of men in prison increased only 53% during that same time. See id. About 71% of all state female prisoners had
served a prior sentence to probation or incarceration, including 20% who had served a sentence as juveniles. See id.
[FN36]. See id. Women in state prisons in 1991 were most likely to be black (46%), age 25 to 34 (50%), unemployed at the
time of arrest (53%), high school graduates, holders of a GED, or with some college (58%), and never married (45%). See id.
The percentage of women in prison who had never married increased from 42% in 1986 to 45% in 1991. See id. About
one-third of female inmates in both years were either separated or divorced. See id. Female prisoners who were tested for the
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and reported the results, were more likely to test positive than male prisoners. See id.
[FN37]. See id. Women incarcerated for violent offenses included about three in ten female inmates in 1991, down from four
in ten in 1986. See id. Despite this decrease in the proportion of violent female inmates, the number of women sentenced for
a violent offense rose from 8,045 to 12,400 during a 5- year period. See id. About 28% of the women reported no previous
sentences to incarceration or probation, compared to 19% of the men. Id. Four in ten women had a history of violence. See id.
Nearly half of all women in prison were currently serving a sentence for a nonviolent offense and had only nonviolent
offenses for prior convictions. See id. See also Amnesty International website (visited Sept. 16, 1999) <http://www.amnestyusa.org/rightsforall/women/factsheets/drugs.html>.
[FN38].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/factsheets/children.html>. Thirteen hundred babies were born to women in prison
in 1997-1998. See id. In only a handful of states are inmates allowed to keep their children for limited time periods. See id.
Frequently, the infant is removed soon after birth. See id. More than three-quarters of all women in prison had children, and
two- thirds of the women had children under age 18. See Special Report, Survey supra note 34. Regardless of race, the
children's grandparents were the single most common category of care givers. See id. Nearly 10% of the women reported that
their children were in a foster home, agency, or institution. See id. "Among the most egregious indignities to which pregnant
women are subjected is that they are shackled while being transported to local hospitals to deliver their children ...." Women
Behind Bars, supra note 5.
[FN39]. See Special Report, Survey, supra note 34. In 1991, 10% of female inmates were in prison for fraud (which includes
forgery and embezzlement), down from 17% in 1986. See id.
[FN40]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 37. From 1986 to 1996 the number of women sentenced to state
prison for drug crimes increased tenfold. See id. Nationally one-in-three women in prison and one-in-four women in jail are
incarcerated for violating a drug law. See id. Nearly one- in-three female inmates were serving a sentence for drug offenses in
1991, compared to one-in-eight in 1986. See Special Report, Survey, supra note 34. This increase in sentenced drug offenders
accounted for 55% of the increase in the female prison population between 1986 and 1991. See id.
[FN41]. See Amy Laderberg, "The Dirty Little Secret": Why Class Actions Have Emerged as the Only Viable Option for

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Women Inmates Attempting to Satisfy the Subjective Prong of the Eighth Amendment in Suits for Custodial Sexual Abuse,
40 WM. & MARY L. REV. 323, 338 (1998); Karen D. McDonald, Note, Michigan's Efforts to Hold Women Criminally and
Civilly Liable for Failure to Protect: Implications for Battered Women, 44 WAYNE L. REV. 289 (1998); Report by the
Bureau of Justice Statistics, Selected Findings, Domestic Violence: Violence Between Inmates, NCJ-149259, Nov. 1994
[hereinafter Selected Findings].
[FN42]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 38.
[FN43].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/stories/elizabeth.html>. Since the Civil Rights Act of 1964, prohibitions have been
placed on U.S. employers who attempt to deny a person a job based on gender. All Too Familiar, supra note 5, at 2. This
created serious disparity resulting in male correctional officers numbering twice the number of female officers, and in some
facilities the disparity is even greater. See id. See generally Rebecca Jurado, The Essence of Her Womanhood: Defining the
Privacy Rights of Women Prisoners and the Employment Rights of Women Guards, 7 AM. U.J. GENDER SOC. POL'Y & L.
1 (1999) (exploring the reliance on gender to promote the employment opportunities of females).
[FN44]. See Jurado, supra note 43.
[FN45]. See id.
[FN46].
See
id.
See
also
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
http://www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/stories/robin.html> (describing the horrifying details of
sodomization, and rape which Robin, a homosexual female prisoner, experienced while incarcerated).

1999)
assault,

[FN47]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 46.
[FN48]. See id. "Even in those cases where an officer engages in sexual relations with a prisoner absent any form of pressure
or exchange, he should still be liable for a serious criminal offense." Id. ¶ 13.
[FN49]. See Women Behind Bars, supra note 5; Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6; and Cook & Parenti, supra note 27.
[FN50]. See Cook & Parenti, supra note 27. See also Richard D. Vetstein, Note, Rape and AIDS in Prison: On a Collision
Course to a New Death Penalty, 30 SUFFOLK U. L. REV. 863 (1997) (explaining increased rampant nature of prison rape
and deadly implications since female inmates fail to report assaults). Although this Note does not discuss male prison rape,
some researchers estimate that of the forty-six million Americans entering the criminal justice system, ten million will be
raped while in custody. See id. One expert testified that the actual number of rapes in prison may be five to six times greater
than the number of reported assaults. See id. at 870.
[FN51]. See Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6. The Department of Justice concluded that the fear of retaliation and vulnerability
prohibits inmates who would otherwise report sexual abuse and assaults. See id.
[FN52]. Cook & Parenti, supra note 27.
[FN53]. See Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6 § III. Heather Wells complained about sexual contact with a prison cook, which
landed her in solitary confinement. See Amnesty International website (visited Sept. 16, 1999) <
http://www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/stories/heather.html>. She was warned never to accuse staff or report sexual
misconduct or she would again suffer the consequences. See id.
[FN54]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 7.
[FN55]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 6. In November 1998, Valley State Prison correction officials in
California informed Amnesty delegates that prisoners' rights were specified in writing and retaliation was not a problem. See
id. Contrary to Valley State reports, the prisoners continued to report that they suffered verbal abuse and repeatedly had their
possessions searched for complaining. See id.
[FN56]. See Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6. Guards not only threaten the prisoner's children, but also threaten to revoke

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visitation rights as a means of silencing the women. See id.
[FN57].
See
Amnesty
International
website
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/assault.html>.

(visited

Sept.

16,

1999)

<http://

[FN58]. Id. Occasionally, correction officials punish inmates by segregation and security status change, which may prolong
jail sentences. See id.
[FN59]. See Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6. This report discusses how correction officials make no attempt to keep the
names of prisoners who file complaints away from the correctional officer committing the sexual assault. See id.
[FN60]. Id. ¶ 18.
[FN61]. Human Rights Watch is an organization dedicated to protecting the human rights of people around the world. The
organization investigates and exposes human rights violations.
[FN62]. See Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6.
[FN63]. See id. The report found that "[i]f you are sexually abused, [in a women's correctional facility], you cannot escape
from your abuser." Id.
[FN64]. See id.
[FN65]. See id.
[FN66]. See id.
[FN67]. Id.
[FN68]. See id.
[FN69]. See Downey v. Denton County, 119 F.3d 381 (5th Cir. 1997) (holding that inmate sexually assaulted and
impregnated did not prove supervisor knew the substantial risk of harm); Carrigan v. Delaware, 957 F. Supp 1376 (D. Del.
1997)(finding that inmate raped and threatened by officer failed to give administration notice of the risk of harm); Adkins v.
Rodriguez, 59 F.3d 1034 (10th Cir. 1995) (finding no constitutional violation against guard sexually harassing inmate);
Freitas v. Ault, 109 F.3d 1335 (8th Cir. 1997) (holding that the relationship between inmate and prison employee was
consensual); Laderberg, supra note 41.
[FN70]. All Too Familiar, supra note 5 at 1. See also Angela Y. Davis, Public Imprisonment and Private Violence:
Reflections on the Hidden Punishment of Women, 24 NEW ENG. J. ON CRIM. & CIV. CONFINEMENT 339, 350 (1998)
(discussing widespread leniency with which offending officers are treated); but cf. Laura Neergaard, 14 Are Indicted in
Georgia Prison Sexual Abuse Case, BOSTON GLOBE, Nov. 14, 1992, available in 1992 WL 4201362 (discussing that at
least 100 inmates are under a protective court order to prevent retaliation by correctional officers or prison staff).
[FN71]. Cook & Parenti, supra note 27. "States' failure to uphold their own laws regarding custodial sexual misconduct
reflects their reluctance to prosecute such crimes, largely because of an ingrained belief ... that the prisoner was complicit in
the sexual abuse committed against her." Id. See Stein, supra note 9.
[FN72].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16.
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/laws.html>. Amnesty International detailed a survey of statutes on custodial
sexual contact. See id. The abusive nature of sexual relationships between guards and inmates needs to be recognized. See id.
Consensual sex cannot exist behind bars based on the imbalance of power between inmates and guards. See id. Seven states
do not possess laws criminalizing consensual sex between inmates and staff. See id. at
<http://www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/action.html>. They include Alabama, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Utah,
Vermont, West Virginia, and Alaska. See id. Since Amnesty's report was released, Illinois, Montana, Nebraska, Virginia and
Washington enacted laws protecting female inmates. See id.

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[FN73]. See Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6 at <http:// www.hrw.org/reports98/women/Mich-05.htm#P380_96183>. Officers
wishing to report abuse are afraid the crooked officers might do something to them. See id. "A lot of [officers] know what's
right and what's wrong, but they don't have the guts to put up with it on a daily basis ... How are you going to protect
[officers] ... because there's no way they're going to be able to function [in the facility] afterwards." Id. (quoting the
deposition of Michigan Correctional Officer Julie Kennedy-Carpenter on April 13, 1998).
[FN74]. Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6, at 4.
[FN75]. See Charlene Muehlenhard et al., Definitions of Rape: Scientific and Political Implications, 48 J. SOC. ISSUES, 23
(1992).
[FN76]. See 65 AM. JUR. 2D Rape § 1 (1972). The United States protects its citizens under laws such as the Eighth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits the unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain.
[FN77]. See Wendy Rae Willis, The Gun is Always Pointed: Sexual Violence and Title III of the Violence Against Women
Act, 80 GEO. L.J. 2197 (1992); Evelyn Mary Aswad, Note, Torture by Means of Rape, 84 GEO. L.J. 1913 (1996). "[R]ape is
not primarily a sexual act ... [r]ape is primarily an act of violence with sex as the weapon." Id. at 1920. "The view that rape is
a private, sexual act may be one of the greatest obstacles to the classification of rape as torture." Id. at 1943.
[FN78]. See id. at 2198. Reports by the Bureau of Justice Statistics estimate 1.5 million women and 123,000 men were raped
between 1973 and 1982. See id. at 2199.
[FN79]. See id.; Special Report, Survey, supra note 34; Holmes, supra note 15.
[FN80]. See Willis, supra note 77, at 2211. A woman's fear of rape acts as a constraint that ultimately defers her to the man's
control. See id. at 2207. "Rape is not a natural product of the male sex drive, but rather an expression of sex discrimination."
Id. at 2206.
[FN81]. See Cook & Parenti, supra note 27.
[FN82]. Siegal, supra note 29. See Holmes, supra note 15; and Cook & Parenti, supra note 27.
[FN83]. July 20, 1995: The air inside the D.C. jail is thick with humid heat. Jail staff have opened all the cells. Soul music
bounces off the sticky concrete walls and steel bars. Down at the end of the tier the officer in charge, Yvonne Walker, starts
dancing and inmates join in. Before long, one prisoner is undulating on a table, half-naked. Soon, Walker is partially
disrobed, while another inmate is performing a sex trick with a lit cigarette. In a toxic blend of chaos and coercion,
corrections officers begin calling for other inmates to strip. Sunday is a dancer, too, someone shouts, referring to inmate
Sunday Daskalea, who is hiding in her open cell. A prison staffer dispatches a posse of three inmates to retrieve her. The
guards, she is told, will be "mad" if she doesn't perform for the crowd.
Cook & Parenti, supra note 27.
[FN84]. See Jordan v. Gardner, 986 F.2d 1521 (9th Cir. 1993). Women are primarily the caretakers in the home and
experience great anguish upon separation from children and family. Women Behind Bars, supra note 5. There is gross
inequality between men and women in the home, the workplace, and on the streets because men have significant power over
women. See Willis, supra note 73, at 2206. "Sexual assault is a class based violence committed by men against women." Id.
at 2200. The Violence Against Women Act, introduced on January 14, 1991, protects victims of sexual violence and Title III
of the Act provides the victims a federal civil rights remedy. See id. at 2201.
[FN85]. See id. at 1525-26, 1531-34. More than 4 in every 10 women reported that they had been abused at least once before
their admission to prison. See Special Report, Survey, supra note 34. An estimated 34% of female inmates reported being
physically abused, and 34% reported being sexually abused. See id. About 32% said the abuse had occurred before age 18,
and 24% said they had been abused since age 18. See id. An estimated 50% of women in prison who reported abuse said they
had experienced abuse at the hands of an inmate, compared to 3% of men. See id. For more information regarding female
pre-incarceration abuse rates, see Lynn Smith, Majority of State's Women Inmates Abused as Children, Warden Says, LOS
ANGELES TIMES (Mar. 19, 1992), available in WL 2937221 (stating that the average female prisoner reports sexual abuse
in original home). See also the Chicago Tribune's study, Abuse Rates High Among Inmates, Apr. 12, 1999 (noting that more

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than 36% of female state prison and jail inmates surveyed in 1996-1997 reported they were abused sexually or physically at
age 17 or younger). See id.
[FN86]. See Willis, supra note 77, at 2225 (citing Susan Brownmiller, Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape (1975)).
The younger, weaker prison male is often raped and forced into playing the role typically assigned to women in the outside
world. See id. Thus, "male on male rape generally occurs not as a result of animus toward men, but as a result of animus
toward women or those assigned 'women's roles'." Id. See also SPR Brief, supra note 2 § F. The rape of male on male
prisoners is an abuse of power. See id. "The issue ... is not homosexuality but heterosexual brutality." Id. Many male on male
prison rapists have wives and children but feel the need to practice "the customary sexual activity" of "penile penetration, by
which most of them define their 'manhood'." Id.
[FN87]. See Jordan, supra note 84 (citing Ellison v. Brady, 924 F.2d 872, 879 (9th Cir. 1991)). The majority of rape victims
are women who live in a state of fear regarding sexual violence that men do not understand. See id. Police authorities
frequently mock and victimize women reporting sexual crimes. See Willis, supra note 77, at 2199.
[FN88]. Id. at 1526.
[FN89]. See A. NICHOLAS GROTH, MEN WHO RAPE: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE OFFENDER 104-09 (1979);
JEAN MACKELLAR, RAPE: THE BAIT AND THE TRAP 69 (1975).
[FN90]. Aswad, supra note 77, at 1943.
[FN91]. Berta Esperanza Hernandez-Truyol, Article, Women's Rights as Human Rights--Rules, Realities and the Role of
Culture: A Formula for Reform, 21 BROOK. J. INT'L L. 605, 613 (1996).
[FN92]. See QueenDom.Com, Mental and Emotional Health: Rape Trauma Syndrome (visited Nov. 3, 1999)
http://www.queendom.com/articles/rapeintr.html>. More than half of rape victims show some level of rape trauma. See id.
"Some women express their feelings, showing fear, anxiety; they often cry and are tense. Other women try to control their
expression, mask their feelings and they attempt to look calm." Id. After a traumatic rape encounter, the victim deals not only
with the rape's impact on herself, but others' reactions to it as well. See id.
[FN93]. See id. See also AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, DIAGNOSTIC AND STATISTICAL MANUAL
OF MENTAL DISORDERS 424 (4th ed. 1994). "Until the 1970s, very few studies focused on the psychological aftermath of
rape survivors." See Aswad, supra note 77, at 1931. Researchers identified "rape trauma syndrome" in 1974 as a condition
from which many rape survivors suffer. See id. "PTSD is an anxiety disorder resulting from direct exposure to an 'extreme
traumatic stressor."' Id. at 1935.
[FN94]. "Most researchers agree with the APA's classification of rape trauma syndrome as a manifestation of PTSD." Aswad,
supra note 77, at 1935. "Unlike other forms of torture, rape transforms an act that once symbolized unity and pleasure with
another human into an act of combat." Id. at 1940. "Rape survivors also may relive their torture during future sexual
contacts." Id.
[FN95]. See Theodor Meron, Comment, Rape as a Crime Under International Humanitarian Law, 87 AM. J. INT'L L. 424,
426-27 (1993). Rape constitutes a crime against humanity and is morally and legally wrong. See Aswad, supra note 77, at
1940.
[FN96].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women-23.html>. The degrading, cruel, and inhumane treatment a female prisoner
receives by being raped is no different than the experience of torture victims. See id.
[FN97]. Cook & Parenti, supra note 27.
[FN98].
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/conference/bill.html>.

Sept.

16,

1999)

<http://

[FN99]. The position of the Rapporteur was created in 1985 to report to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights on

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matters relating to the prevalence of torture. In 1994, the Commission on Human Rights appointed a Special Rapporteur to
specifically oversee issues dealing with violence against women.
[FN100]. Question of the Human Rights of All Persons Subjected to Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment, In Particular:
Torture, and Other Cruel, Inhumane or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. Report of the Special Rapporteur, U.N. ESCOR
Commission on Human Rights, 50th Sess., Provisional Agenda Item 10(a), para. 19, U.N. Doc. E/CN.4/1995/34 (1995). See
Meron, supra note 95; Beth Stephens, Women and the Atrocities of War, 20 HUM. RTS. Q. 12, 13-15 (1993).
[FN101]. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights publishes periodic reports on its visits to investigate allegations
of human rights violations in various states. For one of the commission's reports, see The Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Haiti, Inter-Am. C.H.R. 43, MRE/RES 6/94 (1995).
[FN102]. Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6 § 60.
[FN103]. See Timothy F. Malloy, Disentangling Treaty and Customary International Law, 81 ASIL PROCEEDINGS 157
(1987); Kathleen M. Kedian, Customary International Law and International Human Rights Litigation in United States
Courts: Revitalizing the Legacy of the Paquete Habana, 40 WM. & MARY L. REV. 1395 (1999).
[FN104]. JOHN S. GIBSON, DICTIONARY OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW 2 (1996). See Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties, art. 26, U.N. Doc A/ Conf. 39/27, May, 23, 1969 [hereinafter Vienna Convention]; Maria
Frankowska, The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties Before United States Courts, 28 VA. J. INT'L L. 281 (1988).
[FN105]. See Vienna Convention, supra note 104.
[FN106]. One could argue that a state's voluntary signature on any treaty should be justification enough to bind the state to
the treaty's articles.
[FN107]. "'[R]atification,' 'acceptance,' 'approval' and accession' mean in each case the international act so named whereby a
State establishes on the international plane its consent to be bound by a treaty." Vienna Convention, supra note 104 art.
2(1)(b). See U.S. RATIFICATION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES: WITH OR WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
(Richard B. Lillich ed., 1981).
[FN108]. "[R]eservation means a unilateral statement, however phrased or named, made by a state, when signing, ratifying,
accepting, approving or acceding to a treaty, whereby it purports to exclude or modify the legal effect of certain provisions of
the treaty in their application to that State." Id. art. 2(1)(d).
[FN109]. See id. § 2, arts. 19-23.
[FN110]. See LIESBETH LIJNZAAD, RESERVATIONS TO UN-HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES: RATIFY AND RUIN?
77-88 (T.M.C. Asser Instituut ed., 1995). "This ... can be explained by the fact that by their very nature human rights
instruments intend to operate in a field in which the State used to be the sole legislator." Id. at 78.
[FN111]. Vienna Convention, supra note 104 art. 19(c).
[FN112]. See Universal Declaration of Human Rights, supra note 16; Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6; Amnesty International
website, supra note 1.
[FN113]. The Economic and Social Council promotes universal respect and observes fundamental human rights and
freedoms for all without regard to race, sex, language, or religion.
[FN114]. See Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, adoptedby the First United Nations Congress, held at
Geneva in 1955, and approved by the Economic and Social Council by its Resolution 663 C (XXIV) of July 31, 1957 and
2076 (LXII) on May 13, 1977. See Daniel L. Skoler, World Implementation of the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules
for Treatment of Prisoners, 10 J. INT'L L. & ECON. 453, 454-57 (1975).
[FN115]. Bernard, supra note 20, at 771. The Standard Minimum Rules do not set out a detailed model for penal institutions
to follow. See id. Instead they give a general consensus constituting the essential elements of an adequate correctional

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facility's treatment of prisoners. See id.
[FN116]. See Miller, supra note 11, at 148.
[FN117]. See id.
[FN118]. Id.
[FN119]. See Standard Minimum Rules, supra note 114. "Men and women shall so far as possible be detained in separate
institutions; in an institution which receives both men and women the whole of the premises allocated to women shall be
entirely separate." Id. ¶ 8(a). "In women's institutions there shall be special accommodation for all necessary pre-natal and
post-natal care and treatment." Id. ¶ 23(1). "Where nursing infants are allowed to remain in the institution with their mothers,
provisions shall be made for a nursery staffed by qualified persons." Id. ¶ 23(2). "In an institution for both men and women,
the part of the institution set aside for women shall be under the authority of a responsible woman officer who shall have the
custody of the keys of all that part of the institution." Id. ¶ 53(1). "No male member of the staff shall enter the part of the
institution set aside for women unless accompanied by a woman officer." Id. ¶ 53(2). "Women prisoners shall be attended
and supervised only by women officers ...." Id. ¶ 53(3).
[FN120]. Id. at ¶ 53(2).
[FN121]. Id. at ¶ 53(3). "This [article of the Standard Minimum Rules] does not ... preclude male members of the staff,
particularly doctors and teachers, from carrying out their professional duties in institutions or parts of institutions set aside for
women." Id.
[FN122]. See id. at ¶ 36(3). See also Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6, Part IV. Regulations and standards for the running of
prisons fail without proper mechanisms for reporting violations. See id.
[FN123].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/report/women-01.html>. Amnesty gathered and referenced this information from
the United Nations Commission on Human Rights where the then United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, Professor
Kooijmans noted that "since it was clear that rape or other forms of sexual assault against women in detention were a
particularly ignominious violation of the inherent dignity and the right to physical integrity of the human being, they
accordingly constituted an act of torture." Id.
[FN124]. See id.
[FN125].
See
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/report/women-05.html>; Bernard, supra note 20, at 770.

1999)

<http://

[FN126]. See id.
[FN127]. See Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, G.A. Res.
39/46, U.N. GAOR, 39th Sess., Supp. No. 51, 93rd mtg., U.N. Doc. A/Res/39/46 (1984). The right to be free from torture and
cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment is found not only in the Standard Minimum Rules and the Convention
Against Torture, but also in the Universal Declaration of Human rights, the European Convention for the Protection of
Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, the American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man, and the American
Convention on Human Rights. See Matthew Lippman, The Development and Drafting of the United Nations Convention
Against Torture and Other Cruel Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, 17 B.C. INT'L & COMP. L. REV. 275,
312 (1994).
[FN128]. Torture in this context does not refer to domestic or street violence. Rather, it is a process of brutal human
degradation .... The World Medical Association, in its Declaration of Tokyo (1975), defines it as follows: "Torture is ... the
deliberate, systematic, or wanton infliction of physical or mental suffering by one or more persons, acting alone or on the
orders of any authority, to force another person to yield information, to make a confession, or for any other reason."
Harvey M. Weinstein, M.D., MPH; Laura Dansky, Ph.D.; and Vincent Iacopino, M.D., Ph.D., Torture and War Trauma
Survivors in Primary Care Practice, 1650 WESTERN J. MED. 112-17, (Sept. 1996).

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[FN129]. See id. at 112.
[FN130]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 22.
[FN131]. Convention Against Torture, supra note 127 art. I. See Aswad, supra note 77, at 1917. The Inter-American
Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture, entered into force in 1987, uses the same definition of torture. See id.
[FN132]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 22 art. 4. Parties must ensure that abuse is investigated and
punished. See id. The Convention Against Torture prohibits parties from returning or extraditing an individual to a country
when there is a substantial belief the subject may be tortured. See Aswad, supra note 77, at 1917. "[P]arties to the
[Convention Against Torture] must treat torture as an extraditable offense between each other and help each other pursue
complaints of torture." Id.
[FN133]. Bernard, supra note 20, at 767; see Aswad, supra note 77.
[FN134]. See Aswad, supra note 77.
[FN135]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 22 chap. 7. The United States refused persons within its borders
permission to bring complaints alleging human rights violations to international monitoring bodies. See id.
[FN136].
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/report/women-001.html> (quoting the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action
report which was adopted at the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1953).
[FN137]. See Auman, supra note 19, at 10. One important feature of the Convention Against Torture is the creation of a
committee authorized to investigate torture allegations by member nations. See id. Reports are made annually to all member
states and to the U.N. General Assembly. See id.
[FN138]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 125.
[FN139]. See U.S. Department of State, Initial Report of the United States of America to the UN Committee Against Torture
(visited Jan. 26 2000) <http:// www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/torture_intro.html> [hereinafter Initial Report].
"The United States also ratified the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination at the
same time as it ratified the Torture Convention." Id.
[FN140]. See id. part II. "In the view of the United States, it was necessary to limit U.S. undertakings under this article
primarily because the meaning of the term "degrading treatment" is at best vague and ambiguous." Id. "One specific concern
involved the possibly extensive reach of governmental obligations under this article, especially in light of the constraints
imposed by the federal character of the U.S. system and the limitations of the state action doctrine." Id.
[FN141]. The Fourth Amendment guarantees the rights of privacy and personal integrity, prohibiting unreasonable search
and seizure. Lower U.S. courts interpret this to prohibit male guards from strip-searching female prisoners, conducting
intrusive pat-frisks, and engaging in inappropriate visual surveillance. See Fortner v. Thomas, 983 F.2d 1024 (11th Cir.
1993); Cookish v. Powell, 945 F.2d 441 (1st Cir. 1991); Hardin v. Stynchcomb, 691 F.2d 1364 (11th Cir. 1982), reh'g denied,
696 F.2d 1007 (11th Cir. 1983); Smith v. Fairman, 678 F. 2d 52, 54 (7th Cir. 1982).
[FN142]. The Eighth Amendment, which bars cruel and unusual punishment, has been interpreted by U.S. courts to protect
prisoners against rape and sexual assault that occurs as a result of deliberate indifference by corrections officials who knew,
or should have known, of the substantial risk of assault. Farmer v. Brennan, 114 S.Ct. 1970 (1994). See Initial Report, supra
note 139.
[FN143]. The term "torture" is defined in the Convention Against Torture but limitations exist since the treaty fails to define
"cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment." Bernard, supra note 20, at 766.
[FN144]. Miller, supra note 11, at 146 (quoting the Committee on Foreign Relations, Convention Against Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, S.Exec. Rep. No. 30, 101st Cong., 2d Sess. 26 (1990)). See Initial

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Report, supra note 139.
[FN145]. All Too Familiar, supra note 5, at 3.
[FN146]. The Committee Against Torture specifically supervises member states in order to protect against torture and other
inhumane treatment.
[FN147]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 125.
[FN148]. See id.
[FN149]. By limiting its reservation and narrowing the torture definition, the United States effectively brings itself out of the
Treaty's jurisdiction and limits the Treaty's enforcement for prisoner protection.
[FN150]. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, G.A. Res. 2200, U.N. GAOR, 22d Sess., Supp. No. 16,
1496th mtg., U.N. Doc. A/6316 (1966) (entered into force Mar. 23, 1976) [hereinafter ICCPR]. See Amnesty International
website, supra note 24. The Covenant's governing body is the Human Rights Committee of the United Nations. See Auman,
supra note 19, at 9. The Committee hears complaints submitted by member nations and requires periodic status reports. See
id. For a discussion on the ICCPR, see PAUL R. WILLIAMS, TREATMENT OF DETAINEES: EXAMINATION OF
ISSUES RELEVANT TO DETENTION BY THE UNITED NATIONS HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE 28-29, 35 (1990);
DOMINIC MCGOLDRICK, THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE: ITS ROLE IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE
INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS, 369, 389 (1991).
[FN151]. Although this Covenant is non-binding, the signatories to it ensure its citizens and the citizens of its respective
colonies that they will abide by these civil and political rights. Some of the provisions include the right not to be subjected to
torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment (Article 7); the right of any detained person to be treated with
humanity and with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person (Article 10); and the right to privacy without arbitrary
or unlawful interference (Article 17).
[FN152]. See IICPR, supra note 150.
[FN153]. See id. See Michelle Lewis Liebeskind, Article, Preventing Gender-Based Violence: From Marginalization to
Mainstream in International Human Rights, 63 REV. JUR. U.P.R. 645 (1994).
[FN154]. ICCPR, supra note 150 art. 17.
[FN155]. See id. "Targeting of women because of their race or ethnic identity violates their right against discrimination under
the
[Covenant]."
Amnesty
International
website
(visited
Sept.
16,
1999)
<http://www.amnestyusa.org/rightsforall/women/report/women-23.html>.
[FN156]. Id. art. 19.
[FN157]. See Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6.
[FN158]. ICCPR, supra note 150 art. 10(1).
[FN159]. See Initial Report, supra note 139.
[FN160]. See id.
[FN161]. The Human Rights Committee is a body of experts established by the Political Covenant who provide authoritative
guidance on the interpretation of its provisions and monitor government implementation.
[FN162]. Amnesty International website, supra note 25. Other countries disagree with the United States' reservation to
Article 7 for similar reasons. See id. Under international law, an incompatible reservation is not valid and the relevant treaty
provision is still considered binding. See Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties art. 19(c).

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[FN163]. See id. Member nations may be participants to the Optional Protocol, which binds the party to stricter enforcement.
See id. A second protocol required member nations to take steps to abolish the death penalty. See id.
[FN164]. See id.
[FN165]. See id.
[FN166]. See id.
[FN167]. See Amnesty International website, supra note 24. "Sexual abuse also violates the right to be treated with respect
for human dignity." Id.
[FN168]. See Sophia Woodman,Press Release Report, Eight Years After Signing the Convention Against Torture, China has
Failed to Incorporate its Standards into Chinese Law and Practice, HUMAN RIGHTS IN CHINA (Apr. 8, 1996), available at
<http://www.igc.apc.org/hric>. For a discussion regarding the violation of human rights in China, see China Rights Forum,
The
Universal
Declaration
of
Human
Rights
and
China,
Fall
1998,
available
at
<http://
www.hrichina.org/crf/english/98fall/fa9803.htm>; AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL, Human Rights Are Women's Right:
Human Rights Violations Suffered by Women in China, 1995; Ann Kent, China and the International Human Rights Regime:
A Case Study of Multilateral Monitoring 1989-1994, 17 HUM. RTS. Q. 1 (1995).
[FN169]. See Daniel C. Turack, The New Chinese Criminal Justice System, 7 CARDOZO J. INT'L & COMP. L. 49, 67
(1999).
[FN170]. See id.
[FN171]. See China Rights Forum, Women in China: Imprisoned and Abused for Dissent, 1995 [hereinafter China Rights
Forum, Women in China] (visited Nov. 15, 1999) <http://www.hrichina.org/crf/english/95fall/e7.html>.
[FN172]. See id.
[FN173]. See id.
[FN174]. See id.
[FN175]. See China Rights Forum, Words Without Substance: China's Implementation of the Convention Against Torture,
1996 (visited Nov. 15, 1999) <http://www.hrichina.org/crf/english/96summer/e9.html> [hereinafter Words Without
Substance]. See also United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Treaties Bodies Database, China (visited Nov.
15, 1999) <http://www.unhchr.ch> (showing that China made reservations to Article 20 & Article 30 of the Convention
Against Torture).
[FN176]. See Treaties Bodies Database, supra note 175. China signed the ICCPR on May 10, 1998, but has yet to ratify the
Treaty. See id.; China's Intention to Sign UN Rights Covenant a "Cheap Gesture," AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE, Mar. 12,
1998, available in LEXIS, News Library.
[FN177]. See Words Without Substance, supra note 175. There is no mention of psychological torture in Chinese law. See id.
Chinese law refers to torture as (1) coercing a statement and (2) subjecting imprisoned persons to corporal punishment and
abuse for the first purpose. See id.
[FN178]. Human Rights in China is an organization dedicated to investigating and reporting human rights abuses in the
People's Republic of China.
[FN179]. Amnesty International and other human rights organizations firmly believe that serious human rights violations
continue in China. See Amnesty International website, supra note 162.
[FN180]. See Words Without Substance, supra note 175. The Chinese government submitted a report to the Committee
Against Torture in 1989 but provided no information regarding torture in its detention facilities. See id. Upon submitting a
second report in 1995, China provided no information regarding the prevalence of torture or any studies conducted. See id.

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[FN181]. China's legal and judiciary components tend to provide torturers leniency. See id.
[FN182]. See China Rights Forum, Women in China, supra note 171. "Sonam Drolkar, a Tibetan woman was arrested on
July 29, 1990, and held at Seitru Prison where she was tortured so badly that she was eventually hospitalized." Id. "She was
stripped naked ... [e]lectric batons were pushed into her vagina." Id. "By February 1991 she was vomiting and urinating blood
every day ...." Id. Female inmates also reported being raped and abused by male cellmates in pre-trial detention centers in
China's southern provinces. See id.
[FN183]. See China Rights Forum, Women in China, supra note 171.
[FN184]. See id.
[FN185]. "A principal reason for the failure of the Chinese legal system to prevent torture effectively is the lack of judicial
independence and the relative lack of status of the judiciary in comparison to other state organs." Words Without Substance,
supra note 175, at 2.
[FN186]. See id.
[FN187]. Human Rights in China, Caught Between Tradition and the State: Violations of the Human Rights of Chinese
Women, Fall 1995.
[FN188]. Nowhere to Hide, supra note 6 § IV.
[FN189]. Id., Recommendations, §§ I-II.
[FN190].
See
Amnesty
International
website
www.amnesty-usa.org/rightsforall/women/report/women-50.html>.

(visited

Sept.

END OF DOCUMENT

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16,

1999)

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