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Journal Article

Citation

Venema RM. J. Interpers. Violence 2016; 31(5): 872-899.

Affiliation

Calvin College, Grand Rapids, MI, USA Rvenem68@calvin.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0886260514556765

PMID

25395222

Abstract

While extensive research has studied sexual assault reporting behaviors and described negative experiences with the criminal justice system among victim-survivors, fewer studies have explored police officer attitudes, knowledge, and thought processes that may affect victims' perceptions of negative interactions and unsatisfactory outcomes within reported sexual assault cases. This study explores police officer understanding of the definition of sexual assault and characteristics that influence their perceptions and response. Ten police officers were interviewed within one police department in a midsized city in the Great Lakes region. The study uses a modified grounded theory approach.

FINDINGS suggest that officers employ distinct schema of reported sexual assaults. Case characteristics, perceived credibility of the victim, and types of evidence formed categorizations of false reports, ambiguous cases, and legitimate sexual assaults. Police officers describe the ways in which perceptions of the case may or may not influence the response and point to areas for improvement within police procedure. The study findings provide insight into recommendations for improved police interviewing and response to reported sexual assaults.


Language: en

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