Stuff You Should Know - How Rape Kits Work
Episode Date: April 2, 2019Rape kits are simple forensic evidence collection kits used when someone is sexually assaulted. But the story is deeper than this. Learn all about rape kits, the sad backlog problem, and what you can ...do to help, in today's episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
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and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
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Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
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Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chup Bryant.
There's Jerry over there.
And now whatever chipperness you might hear in my voice
can decline from here on out.
Yeah, man, this is another one of those that's a tough topic.
It's not gonna be loaded with jokes.
No, I can't think of a single one.
And anytime I started it'd be like,
oh, maybe we should come up with jokes now.
It's not like we do that anyway.
Right.
Like this would be a good place for a joke.
Let me get our writers on it.
Insert joke here in brackets.
Yes, obviously, I mean, if you saw the title
about rape kits, hopefully that is the trigger warning
you need, but we might as well just say it out loud.
Trigger warning for this one.
That's all we need to say, I think, right?
Pretty much, I mean, we're talking about rape,
sexual assault in general.
And specifically, I wanna say, Chuck,
I've had on the list for a really long time rape
as a topic itself.
I think it definitely deserves it.
But I've just been kind of walking past it
every time I go down the list, you know?
I think it's due, especially after this one.
But it's almost like we needed to do this one first
or else it wouldn't be stuff you should know.
If we didn't do something tangential,
it would be a bigger topic, right?
So we'll do that eventually.
Yeah, and also this comes out,
this is one of those happenstance things.
As I was researching and reading this stuff,
I was like, oh, you know what?
We should check and see when sexual assault awareness month is.
And it turned out it's April.
And it turned out that April 2nd,
the day that this drops is day of action.
So they encourage people to wear teal on April 2nd,
which is today.
And you're wearing teal today.
I'm wearing, well, it's mint green,
but it's awfully close to teal.
Yeah, it's weird how this is all coming together like this.
So...
You know what action day should be
for sexual assault awareness month?
What?
It should be like a purge.
Like the purge, yeah.
That's what it should be like.
I haven't seen the movie, but I get it.
Yeah, I haven't either, but I know the premise.
And that sexual assault awareness month is carried out
by nsvrc.org, the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.
And also, I know that we're doing a lot of precursoring here,
but there is one section here on what to do
if you've been sexually assaulted, two dudes explaining this,
like just do this.
Like we're not taking it that lightly, you know?
Right.
Like we know that it is extremely difficult
to do anything much less like follow all the exact steps.
So many sexual assaults and rapes get unreported
for a thousand reasons.
So we're not taking this lightly, but this is our job.
This is what we do, and this is an important topic.
So please excuse two dudes explaining a section
on what to do when you're sexually assaulted.
But I think that also raises another point
that I wanna touch on too, Chuck.
Sexual assault doesn't just happen to women.
It happens to men.
The trans community is also a big target
for sexual assault, unfortunately.
So while it is largely women,
from what I've seen women between 18 and 35,
it hits all demographics and targets across the spectrum
of human beings, including men.
So I wanted to say that as well.
All right, now on with the show.
Should we do the history part first, I think?
I was thinking so.
I think we should say what a rape kit actually is.
Oh, that's something we always do wrong.
We're doing it right, though.
We've hit everything right so far, I think.
I think.
A rape kit, and I'm so sorry, everybody,
to keep saying rape kit.
They're also called sexual assault evidence collection kits.
You can understand why people call them rape kits.
But from here on out, maybe we'll just try to say kit.
Sure.
They are really simply a box.
I saw shoe box size, Ed says microwave oven size.
Just depends on the oven.
It's a big old box.
And inside this box is all the stuff you need
to collect the evidence of a sexual assault.
Yeah, that a professional uses.
Yeah, this is not like a home thing.
No, but it does include such thorough step-by-step directions
that someone who's not specifically trained to do this
can carry out this kind of examination,
which is what it is.
I wonder if anyone does this.
Like can you buy these and perform this at home
if you're to 1,000 reasons
why you wouldn't go into a hospital?
I think that you can.
You can buy them from medical supply
or law enforcement supply places.
Both of them sell kits,
and they're actually relatively cheap.
I saw between 15, 25 bucks.
So yeah, you totally could.
Is it still evidence though?
Probably not.
The defense would just shoot holes in it all day long
and the jury would be like, I'm sorry.
Which they're already looking to do.
Part of the process of collecting this evidence
and combining it all together to create this kit
is it begins a chain of custody.
And if you do it at home and then bring it in,
they're gonna be like, come on.
Right, and there are a lot of problems
with the chain of custody
that we're obviously gonna cover as well
when you leave it to the professionals.
It's just a big mess.
It is a big mess, but it's still,
more often than not, it seems to have been a good invention.
And that is a thing.
It is an invention, and it wasn't always around.
It's actually a relatively new invention.
It wasn't until I think 1978
that the first ones actually came into official use
by the, I believe the police department in Chicago
and then later on Illinois,
which served as a bit of a laboratory for it.
And it was so successful that within another year
it started to spread around the country.
Yeah, and just, I mean, it sounds like,
it's hard to believe, but just collecting
and having the tools in a box
and collecting the evidence
and putting it in a box for storage.
Just that alone coming around went a long way
toward helping victims be taken seriously.
Yeah, legitimizing rape and sexual assault.
Yeah, I mean, it's sad, but that's the case.
When they were first brought out,
they were called Vitullo Kits in a lot of circles,
V-I-T-U-L-L-O, and Louis, or Louis, I never know.
I'm thinking since season Chicago, Louis.
Louis or Vitullo. Oh, really?
I thought you were gonna say Louis, because Chicago.
I think it'd be IE if it were in Chicago, Louis.
All right, well, we'll go with Louis.
Let's just call him Chicago Lou.
Chicago Lou Vitullo.
No, he sounds like a mobster.
Yeah. Chicago Lou Vitullo.
I think the Vitullo's really not helping.
No, but he was not a mobster.
He was actually worked in the Chicago PD's forensic crime lab.
He was a sergeant and lieutenant
who did not invent the rape kit,
but he was charged with sort of codifying it
and putting his stamp,
because he was one of the first people
in law enforcement that was trying
to create a standardized procedure.
Yeah, he was already a very well-respected
forensic investigator.
So for him to say,
hey, I'm a big city forensic investigator,
widely respected, and this thing is the bomb.
This is a great invention.
We should all start using it.
And here's how.
It really helps spread and give it a boost early on.
But even though they were called Vitullo kits,
it's not to say like he was like, yeah,
I invented this column Vitullo kits.
No, not at all.
I think he was just known in the mind
of other law enforcement agents
that they associated him and these kits.
So that's what everybody else called it.
But really, if you want to nail down
an inventor of the rape kit,
it was a woman named Martha Marty Goddard.
Yeah, Goddard.
And Vitullo, I read some interviews
with his grandkids and it's like a really proud legacy.
They still get letters from people and from women.
Goddard, she has unplugged,
like I saw one interview with her where they talked about,
and we're gonna cover this heavily later,
but the kit backlog, she didn't even know about it
because she's like no TV, no internet, no newspapers.
She really just sort of checked out.
And she was like, that's really sad to hear about that.
It is very sad.
So I saw a quote somewhere that,
I think as Vitullo's grandkids said
that he would be spinning in his grave
if he knew about this backlog,
which we'll get to later.
So Goddard was a survivor of sexual assault.
And she got together with some other victims, basically.
The writing was on the wall,
like that things weren't being taken seriously
in many police departments.
Yeah, she saw firsthand that they weren't collecting
evidence correctly, that they weren't taking it seriously,
which is still a huge problem.
And she decided to do something about it.
Well, the first questions,
and still in a lot of areas,
probably the first questions still are like,
well, what was the situation?
What were you wearing?
And if it starts with, well, I met a guy at a bar,
then you're sort of discounted, like out of the gate.
Yeah.
Very, very sad and very unfair,
but she formed a group called Citizens for Victims Assistance
in the 1970s and went to work,
like she said she was doing 16-hour days, visiting hospitals,
talking to cops, going to police stations, lawyers, judges,
basically learning and working on everyone she could
about how to get a better system going,
but she needed money.
And she got that from, of all places,
the Playboy Foundation.
Yeah, Hugh Hefner's Foundation.
His daughter, Christy, was friends with Marty Goddard.
And I think Playboy gave her 10 grand,
which is equal to about 42 grand in today's money.
And that was enough to go start assembling these kits.
Because one of the points from the outset of these kits
was that they be inexpensive because they wanted to remove
as many barriers as possible for hospitals
to start implementing these things widely.
And one really easy way to do it was to say,
here, these are virtually free,
or in some cases, these are free
because this community group raised a bunch of money
to purchase the implements of these kits,
put them all together.
And now, here, you just use them, that's all.
Which is a success story in and of itself
when you know how like Big Pharma works
in the medical community in America,
like I could have seen this being like,
well, these swabs and envelopes and combs,
this'll be $7,000 per kit because we put it all
in a box for you.
Marty Goddard got in the way of that from the outset.
And still to this day, I mean, that's why they're not
any more than $5 to $25, even from like a medical supplier.
Yeah, amazing.
Yeah, she's a hashtag hero.
Are we doing that now?
Hashtag in it?
Yeah.
Relate to the game, my friend.
As always, Chuck.
Have you heard about this hashtag thing?
Sure.
You gotta go like this with your two fingers
on each hand, hashtag, okay?
See, I knew you'd get a funny in there.
So they were developed before DNA evidence was even around.
So this was back when it was just like hair
and fiber fingernails, stuff like that.
Still very valuable.
And I think one of the kits that's sort of common these days
is what's known as the Southwestern Sexual Assault
Evidence Collection Kit.
It's like the gold standard.
I guess so, and it's called Southwestern, obviously.
It was in Texas, the Attorney General's Office there
in 1998 kind of created this one.
And that's sort of, like you said, the one that people
look to or base theirs on.
Yeah, because I mean, they took the groundwork
that Marty Goddard came up with going from
to all of what you'd call in the corporate world
and buzz speak, all the stakeholders in the process
of apprehending and convicting people
who sexually assault other people, you know, scumbags.
You can just say monsters.
Yeah, monsters.
And she figured out exactly how to put this together
and laid the groundwork.
And then from what I understand in the late 90s,
the Texas Attorney General's Office said,
let's purify this, let's make it even better,
like using what we know.
And then that's what's in use largely today.
Although you're gonna find different kits,
there's no actual standards, a de facto standard.
And in the same point, different hospitals you go to,
even in the same state are gonna follow
slightly different procedures,
they might use slightly different kits.
But some states have said, no, this is important enough,
like here is how you do this.
Here is the law of how you conduct a rape kit examination.
Yeah, and so Goddard and Vitullo, you know,
his stamp of approval, her working hard to get these things,
you know, built from the ground up,
the work that they did together was like really set
the standard in the late 70s for this across the country,
just becoming just a more normalized way
to collect evidence and take it more seriously.
It was a big, big deal.
Big one, yeah, not just literally having, you know,
all of the implements you need to conduct this investigation,
but just the very presence of these sexual assault
evidence collection kits.
The fact that they exist says law enforcement was saying,
okay, yeah, this is a bigger deal than we've been treating it.
Right.
You wanna take a break?
Yeah, let's do it.
We're gonna take a break, everybody.
I don't know if you just heard, but we'll be right back.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
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as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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It's tough, you should know.
All right, Chuck.
So, the very reason that these kids exist
is because sexual assault is a very unique kind of crime,
in that the victim, the body of the victim,
is a crime scene.
Yeah.
A walking, talking crime scene.
I mean, like if you're murdered or something,
and like your body is dumped somewhere,
your body is still a crime scene,
but you're walking around moving,
you can actually contaminate the very crime scene
from your assault, just by doing things
that any normal human being would want to do
after being sexually assaulted.
For sure.
It's in that sense, a very unique kind of crime scene.
And that's what sexual assault evidence collection kids are
for, is to step-by-step, methodically, systematically,
collect that evidence and preserve it
so that it can later be analyzed and used in court.
Yeah, so these are the recommended steps
if you've been a victim.
And like I said, there are 1,000 reasons
that you would not want to do any and all of these things.
And we totally get that.
And I think Ed puts it in a really good way in this article.
He said, to receive the best possible care,
just medically for yourself, and to have the best chances
of collecting good evidence.
It needs to be within a 24-hour window, ideally.
It's critical.
The 24-hour is critical.
And then apparently, up to three days, it's still viable,
but after three days, most experts are like,
it's not going to get anything.
As far as DNA, which is the real, really,
what you're looking for, you will be very upset,
and you may be in literal shock.
You may have had one or more panic attacks.
All of these things make it very difficult to carry out
like logical steps.
But experts say that the first thing you want to do, obviously,
is get somewhere safe as soon as you can.
Get away if your attacker is around,
and try and find someone, an advocate for you,
whether it's a friend or a family member who can be with you
in the first hours after this horrific event has happened.
Go to the emergency room.
Even if you're not injured, quote unquote, physically,
you really should go to the emergency room as soon as you
can.
This is a big one, not just because the emergency room
is where you're going to have this kid administered,
but also because it takes such tremendous reserve
to draw on such tremendous reserves
to take yourself out of the comfort and safety of your home,
which is probably where you went,
to not take a shower, which is another huge step, too.
And to just say, I'm going to go to the emergency room
and undergo this procedure and let a bunch of strangers poke
and prod me and tell them about what just happened.
That's the ideal of what you're supposed to do.
But if you look at it in that respect,
that's just such a huge thing on top of what just happened
that this is required of you to catch the person who just
did it.
I mean, from a bystander's perspective,
it just makes you want to catch them even more.
But that's on top of the assault as well.
Yeah, because it's not like the trauma is over for you in any
way.
It may never be.
But go to the ER as soon as you can.
If it's not right, if you go to sleep and wake up the next day,
you can go to the emergency room then.
It's just important that you go whenever
you feel like you can do so.
And like you said, it's probably the least intuitive thing
you could imagine to not want to shower and bathe yourself.
But that gets rid of a lot of evidence.
So it's terrible.
But they say, please do not shower.
They say, please.
Please, the capital P.
If you should keep the clothes you're wearing on if you can,
if, understandably, you can't or don't want to, save them.
Yeah, put them in a bag and take them to the ER with you.
Oh, yeah, if you have the wear with all to change clothes,
and this is something that they will have you do in the hospital,
have you stand over like butcher paper or maybe even a towel.
If you have the wear with all to do that wherever you are,
whether it's at home or in a hotel or someplace,
put that in there too.
Because when you're changing your clothes,
that's when DNA evidence can fall out,
whether it's a hair or whatever.
Skin particles.
Right, just collect everything you can and put it in a bag.
Certainly do not wash those clothes and then take those
with you to the emergency room.
And then the last thing you should know,
just because you're going to an emergency room,
and even if you are tested with this forensic kit,
you're not required to file a police report ever.
That's a big one.
But especially right away, it's not
like they're going to have a cop in there grilling you.
You can file this police report whenever you want to.
Yeah, if you are not comfortable filing a police report
right then, you can do what's called a Jane Doe,
or I imagine a John Doe examination,
where they just go through all the steps
and collect all the evidence, but you never see a cop.
They don't call the police until after you've left.
So that's a big one for a lot of people.
The Ed points out though, in some states,
there is still a statute of limitations
of between 10 and 21 years, although some states
have removed the statute of limitations
for a felony sexual assault.
But there can be a clock ticking,
but we're talking 10 years at the least.
So yeah, you don't have to,
this isn't something you have to knock out that day
if you don't want to, if you're not ready to.
When you go to the ER for this kind of examination,
you are signing up for a few hours.
This is going to take a few hours.
It's not a quick procedure.
And there's something else that you should know
that I really hope won't discourage you,
but you should go into it knowing.
It's an invasive procedure.
They have to collect evidence from everywhere
the guy who did this to you,
or the person who did this to you was.
And they're also going to ask you,
they're going to take an oral history
and they're going to ask you to basically recount
the worst thing that's ever happened to you
within 24 hours after it happened.
And then they're going to go over all of the spots
with things like swabs and tweezers and combs
and things like that to collect this evidence.
And it's going to take a while,
but you should expect to be treated very gently
and with a tremendous amount of respect
from the people who are going to administer
this examination.
And I would guess to a hospital,
there will be counselors available there
to be there with you
if you don't have like a friend or a family member
there with you or anything.
Yeah, in rural areas or where they still need to do
a lot of catch-up work in hospitals and things like that.
But if you're in any major city,
there will almost 100% chance
that you'll have what's called a sexual assault nurse
examiner on staff.
This is a nurse who has received extra training
on how to administer this exam.
Like we said before,
like any nurse can do this and do a great job.
But if you have a SA&E, a sane trained person on staff,
then that's who you'll be seeing.
And like I said, in rural areas,
it's just tough to staff up for things like this.
So they're still doing all they can to get grant money
and stuff like that to get these people trained up.
Yeah, it's just a question of extra funding
because if you give a hospital funding
that's set aside for sane nurses,
you just created a new position in a hospital
that wasn't there before.
You've given the nursing staff there an incentive
to go further their education, invest in their education
so that they can have this better job
in the same hospital and help people as well.
So it's really just a question of funding.
That's it, you know?
I mean, a lot of this stuff sadly is a question of funding.
Yeah, luckily there is enough agitation at the bottom up
that the pocket books have kind of loosened up
over recent years.
It is something that hasn't been,
it's been as a result of agitation and bad press
rather than, you know, this is the right thing to do.
Yeah, for sure.
Consent is a big part of the entire procedure.
They're gonna ask you basically before everything,
like, hey, I have a speculum here.
We need to do a vaginal exam.
Is that okay with you?
And you can say no to any and all of this stuff.
This is all up to you.
Yeah.
On how you wanna proceed with this.
And they're gonna ask for your consent
for the whole procedure first.
And then step by step before each step
they're going to ask for your consent as well.
And they're gonna explain what's coming up like you said.
Yeah, and as far as the interview portion,
this is really important stuff as far as what will
eventually wind up with investigators.
And the question's about like,
were you on drugs or had you been drinking?
Like this isn't to set you up for future grilling
by a prosecutor necessarily,
but like if you may have been drugged
or you may have had a drink spiked or something like that.
So all of this is like just super, super important.
So they need to know, they need to say,
hey, future lab tech, test for Rufinol
or something like that, whatever.
If you were in a bar and you suddenly woke up
on the side of the road.
Right.
If that's the kind of history they're taking for you
for those reasons, not, you know,
what were you doing in a bar by yourself?
Yeah, yeah.
That's not what this is.
Again, this is not a detective asking you
or performing this exam.
They might not even be aware of your case yet.
This is a trained nurse or at the very least
a registered nurse who is performing this
with one would expect a tremendous amount of like
compassion and respectfulness.
Absolutely.
You're going to be giving blood and urine samples.
This is super important to provide a DNA baseline.
They will pluck hairs from your scalp.
They will swab your mouth.
They will use a comb to collect pubic hair.
There will be, you know,
we already mentioned a genital exam,
whether it's vaginal or anal.
They really, like you said, they just,
they have to go over with a sort of a fine tooth comb
everywhere where the assault happened.
Yeah.
Since they're going to ask you awful questions,
like where you penetrated anally was an object used,
did the perpetrator lick you or kiss you
or anything like that?
Right.
And depending on these questions,
they're going to investigate further,
but they're going to follow certain steps
that no matter what, but then if you say,
yes, the guy licked my face on like my left cheek,
there's going to be a swab on your left cheek
that they otherwise may not have included
in the normal steps.
Yeah. And again, this is like,
I mean, I can't imagine having to relive something
like this and they're-
Right. Within like 24 hours,
ideally 24 hours after it happened.
Like the worst thing that happened to you in your life,
let's talk about it.
Here, point to where it happened.
Yeah.
You know, from a stranger.
Well, and there are plenty of interviews
that we both read where, you know,
women said it was reliving it.
And I felt like I was being,
even with the great care given,
like I was being assaulted all over again,
it's just so important to try and do if you can get there.
If you can't, there's no blame.
There's no judgment.
Like that's a normal reaction.
This is a lot to ask from somebody,
but this is what it takes to collect the evidence
and preserve it in a way
that you can catch the person who did this.
Yeah, they're gonna test for, well,
it's not required actually to test for STDs,
but they will ask you about STDs.
I would imagine ask if you wanna be tested.
Sure.
They will offer emergency contraception as well.
And you're not going to be charged
for that procedure or the kit.
Here's the thing, go on.
Or you shouldn't be.
No, you won't be.
Not for the administration of the kit.
Right.
Which is, that's great.
That's substantial.
I mean, it's a $16 kit,
but this is also four or five hours of an ER nurses,
potentially a highly trained ER nurses time.
So that's great they're not charging you.
But what's a shame, what's shameful I should say
is that you will still be charged
for any treatment of injuries,
say like you were hit and you need to be treated
with like stitches or whatever.
You'll get a bill for stitches.
If you say, yes, I do want antiviral drugs
because I'm afraid of having contracted an STD
or I do want emergency contraception.
They'll say, here's your prescription
and the pharmacist will charge you for that.
That's not okay.
As a society, we should not ask rape
and sexual assault victims to pay
for their own medical treatment directly coming
from a rape or a sexual assault.
We should bear that burden ourselves.
And then it should give us that even slighter,
additional incentive to go get the guy who did it.
You know what I mean?
Nobody should pay a cent.
And then even worse than that,
and I'm sorry, I realize I'm standing
on a pretty big soapbox right now,
but worse than that Chuck, prior to the Affordable Care Act,
you could not, it was possible that you would be denied
future healthcare coverage, insurance.
If you were the victim of a sexual assault or rape
who went to go get treatment
because they treated it as a pre-existing condition.
Unbelievable.
A pre-existing condition was rape.
Can you believe that?
Sadly, I can.
All right, step down.
They're gonna take this kit.
They're gonna seal everything up.
They're gonna store it.
Everything is like, you know, all the clothing
and everything and all the swabs are dried out and labeled.
And then it's sealed back in that original box
as part of the, I guess the genius of this kit
was that everything that comes out of it
goes right back in and it is also the storage device
where it's labeled.
And then it's all shipped to local law enforcement
and then it's stored quite possibly
till the end of time, sadly, or destroyed.
We'll get to both of those things.
And ideally, and under just about any procedure,
every single person who takes custody of that
is supposed to sign the label on the outside of the box.
So there's a clear chain of custody.
And it goes from the ER nurse to the cops,
to the prosecutors, to the lab,
to the prosecutors and so on.
But there's supposed to be a clear chain of custody
so that there's no questions
about whether it was tampered with or anything.
I always, that's the one thing that weirds me out
about any kind of blood sample I'm ever asked to give
or any kind of procedure I'm ever tested for
is when I see them take my blood or whatever specimen
and they're writing on the little thing
and it leaves the room,
I don't know why my first thought is always like,
well, they're gonna mix that up with somebody,
which is not true.
But I'm always just like, all right,
well, it's out of my vision, so I don't trust it.
I don't know what that is.
It probably stems from having been switched
at birth in the hospital.
That's the only explanation.
All right, we're gonna take a break
and we're gonna come back and talk after this
about the horrific problem of rape kit backlog
and destruction right after this.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the co-classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
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as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
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Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
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It's tough as you know.
All right, so we told you the history of the kit,
how it works, your ideal scenario
for what you should do if you're ever a victim.
And the great ending to this story would be is,
and then those kits go off and they all get tested.
100% conviction rate.
And they have great conviction rates.
And there's no more rate.
It's a long rape.
Sadly, that is not the case.
And this is all over the news for years now,
as it should be.
But well, first of all, this is what happens
in the ideal scenario.
They do store this.
It is tested in a DNA lab.
And then it's checked against the CODIS, the CODIS,
the Combined DNA Index System.
That's the database from the FBI of DNA profiles
of bad people.
And if a hit comes up,
then you have a pretty good chance then
of finding this person.
The other thing about CODIS is this.
When you submit a sample, a DNA sample to CODIS
from a crime like a sexual assault,
and there's not a hit, that sample,
you know, you just go,
okay, sorry, CODIS, can I have my sample back?
Like that sample stays there.
And so future detectives just say they have a suspect
or somebody who comes in and as a matter of routine,
they run the suspect's DNA,
which I think like just a matter of course now,
when you're charged with a crime,
they swab your cheek and then run it through CODIS.
That DNA may be hit.
And all of a sudden this thing,
like you got caught robbing somebody's house,
but now you're up for a rape charge from two years ago,
because your DNA was entered through this rape kit.
So even if you don't get a hit,
that doesn't mean that there's not going to be a conviction.
That's not like the rape kit was all for naught.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Sadly, that's not the way it always works.
In the 2000s, there started to be some,
there were some reporters digging around,
found a story and found out that there are tens of thousands
of rape kits all over the country,
sitting in warehouses and sitting on shelves
for years and years and years untested.
It was so bad Chuck that it became known as the backlog.
Right, yeah.
Like some dating back to the 90s,
where they just, like you said,
sitting in warehouses untested.
And at first, when I think some reporters
started digging this up and found out like,
whoa, this is not okay, how widespread is this?
And started looking around and found it's like everywhere.
And some towns are worse than others.
Akron, Ohio had something like 3000, I think.
2000 kits in Akron, Ohio alone.
So Detroit had, sorry, Akron,
I didn't mean to put more on you than you had.
I was confusing you with Phoenix.
Phoenix had 3000 kits.
Dallas had 4000, Memphis has 12,000.
And in Detroit, a few years back,
somebody wandered into a police storage facility
and was like, oh, there's 11,000 untested rape kits
that have just been, that we just forgot we had.
Here's the problem with that.
There's a couple of problems with it.
But the first one, Chuck,
is that every single one of those kits
represents a person who found the wherewithal
to drag himself or herself to the ER
and go through this hours-long procedure.
And so for a second violation,
basically is what it feels like,
in order to give the cops the evidence that they need
and the cops didn't even bother to send it to the lab,
that is a third violation.
Yeah, and the other problem is that this could be,
like while they're sitting in there,
and this often sadly is the case,
is that these people commit more sexual assaults
when they could be behind bars.
Yeah, in Detroit, so there was 11,000 untested kits
they found.
Let's say that each one was a different perpetrator.
The recidivism, that's a bonehead word,
the recidivism rate they think for sexual offenders
of sexual assault is between five and 32%
over a 15-year period.
So if those kits sat there untested for 15 years,
that means that an additional 550 to 3520 rapes
were carried out by the same people
whose DNA was in those kits, untested.
Unbelievable.
Yeah, so that's unacceptable, right?
And as a result, Congress was like,
here's $150 million to get rid of this backlog.
That should solve it.
It did, it helped a lot, right?
It got the labs going and everything like that.
It's still not enough.
Right, the problem is is it funded labs.
That's what everybody said was,
well, the labs are overworked, what are you gonna do?
So they got more technicians, they got more labs,
and the backlog got worked through in a lot of cases.
In Detroit in particular, the prosecutor,
one of the prosecutors there named Kim Worthy,
who's another hashtag hero of this story,
has been like, this number is going down.
We're going through those kits
and it's systematically and methodically.
That's what it takes.
It takes someone or a body of people,
not just like throwing money at something,
but like specifically following up on the ground.
Right, okay.
So the funding went toward the labs,
but that left another half of this formula,
which is a big one, the cops.
So this backlog got moved through the labs,
but that doesn't mean that the cops
followed up on the results.
And including cases where there were hits in CODIS,
later research by reporters found
that a lot of these cases in the backlog
that got worked through hadn't been followed up on.
Which is another problem.
Yeah, there have been some federal guidelines laid down
since then, specifically the SAFER Act of 2013,
Sexual Assault Forensic Evidence Reporting.
Different states have new laws in place.
Like in New York state, it is law now
that requires kits to be sent in
within 10 days of collection
and tested by the lab within three months.
And they set up a timeline for processing backlog kits.
But it still depends on what city you live in
and what state you live in, because it still happens.
It still happens a lot.
It says here, in 2011 report
from the National Institute of Justice,
18% of unsolved rapes between 2002 and 2007
involved this kind of evidence
that had never been processed.
Right.
18%.
Yep.
And so in the cops defense here,
they're basically saying, most of them are saying,
okay, so great, that was great.
You guys funded the lab.
We're still overworked and understaffed.
And out of room.
Out of room.
Literally to store these kits.
So here is another thing, right?
So that all this stuff went,
all this focus went on the backlog.
As a matter of fact, the third hashtag hero
from this story is Mariska Hargitay from Law and Order SVU.
Just from doing Law and Order SVU,
her eyes were so open to this whole backlog problem
that she started a foundation called
the Joyful Heart Foundation
that is basically dedicated to getting rid
of the rape kit backlog.
Yeah, well actually that's a larger foundation,
but within that is in thebacklog.org.
And here's what you can do everyone
since it is National Awareness Month.
First, put on something teal.
Put on something teal on April 2nd.
Go to in thebacklog.org and click on take action.
And there are a number of things you can do,
but at the bottom there is a donation button and donate.
I set up a monthly today that as far as I'm concerned,
I'll donate monthly till the day I die,
which hopefully is a long time.
Long, long time, hashtag long time.
Yeah, but just go to inthebacklog.org.
If you don't have money to give,
there are other things you can do
under the take action banner, for sure.
Yeah, so back in 2016,
while everybody was talking about the backlog,
worrying about the backlog,
doing something about the backlog,
the Fayetteville, North Carolina chief of police
held a press conference and said,
hey, the city attorneys told me not to do this,
but I feel morally a moral responsibility
to tell the public this,
but we destroyed about 300 untested rape kits
in cases where the statute of limitations
hadn't run out.
Yeah, this isn't sitting on a shelf.
This isn't untested.
This is we threw them away.
They were incinerated.
That evidence is going forever,
and it was never sent off to a lab,
and the statute of limitations was not up in these cases.
And that was huge.
That was a big deal.
And he committed his town, his police department,
to going through all those cases,
contacting the victims and seeing if they could still
build a case for all of them.
They made it a priority,
but it opened Pandora's box around the country,
and CNN got a speculum of their own,
and started crawling around law enforcement agencies
all over the country and saying,
hey, have you guys ever done that?
Have you ever destroyed rape kits?
What's your policy for that?
When's the last time you did it?
Were any of them still within the statute of limitations?
And they found out that it happens a lot, actually.
Like a lot.
Police, to make room in evidence rooms,
they will destroy rape kits.
Some of them have official policies in place.
Some of them is just a detective deciding
that the case isn't going anywhere,
and will say, yeah, you can destroy that rape kit.
Sometimes it's a misunderstanding
of what the statute of limitations is.
Yes, but these kits have never been tested,
and never will be tested.
That evidence is gone forever.
And that is even worse than the backlog
everyone has concluded, and I think rightfully so.
Yeah, and like you mentioned earlier,
just having this stuff entered into CODIS is huge,
because let's say you do nab someone,
and it turns out that they,
it comes up with like six hits
from sexual assaults over the years.
Like, I mean, prison sentences aside,
the value that that has for a victim
to know that that person was caught
and is finally going to pay for their crime
is can't be measured, you know?
Right, and also, like if you go through this procedure,
and you still don't get a hit in CODIS,
but that DNA evidence is in CODIS,
this perpetrator gets caught down the line,
you've contributed to a much stronger conviction against them,
and probably a bigger sentence,
because you've helped establish a pattern
of criminal behavior, and in fact,
that's how they caught the Golden State Killer, I believe,
is from this backlog of rape kits being put through,
and that guy popped up.
I think they got him for like 12 or 13 rapes
during his serial killer career,
through this backlog being moved through,
and that opportunity is lost
if you just destroy this evidence untested.
Secondly, it also ruins any opportunity
for a wrongfully convicted person
who was convicted previously before DNA evidence was used.
Yeah, I mean, that's happened a lot.
If you destroy this evidence,
it removes that possibility as well.
So I think the Justice Department
issued some guidelines that say,
you should hold rape kit evidence
for a minimum of 50 years,
or the statute of limitations, whichever comes first.
And then that's that, and everybody said that's really great,
but we really only legally have to listen
to our state's guidelines, which are all over the place.
Yeah, I wonder if any kind of like penalty
and accountability would help.
Well, I think CNN, like crawling up everybody's butt
is helping for sure.
I think it's kind of opened some people's eyes,
and that was the same thing
that brought so much attention to the backlog.
So hopefully the same attention will come to this too,
and we can start funding police departments
around the country to like carry out the legwork on this.
I just have one more thing.
If you just, and I imagine you could do this
in any given week or day now,
if you just type in rape kit and hit news
on your search engine,
many articles will come up like of that day
of cases like this.
Just today, there was one,
Austin Police Department could potentially reopen
dozens of rape investigations
after getting results from a backlog
of almost 2,700 untested kits.
I believe they got a grant
from New York.
I'm not sure how that happened,
but they got like a million bucks
from a grant from Manhattan to Austin, Texas.
Dude, like we got a lot of money.
You want some of it, Austin?
Maybe, but that allowed them to test like almost 2,700 kits.
Another story, a Tucson man was convicted
of raping seven women over a 12 year period
after police received a grant to test rape kits.
And it said, and it changed a mindset
over which kits get tested.
And then Orlando, Florida, a man is now in jail today.
He fled the state and found him in Puerto Rico.
And once again, this was a long unsolved rape case
that they finally cracked open that kit,
tested it, and bam, this guy comes up.
And they got him in Puerto Rico.
Yep, still a territory, doofus.
If you want to know more about rape kits,
just do what Chuck said and search it on
your favorite search engine's news, okay?
Yeah, go to inthebacklog.org for sure.
Even better.
Just poke around there for a while.
And put on something teal.
Yes.
And in the meantime, it's time for Listener Mail.
I don't think I have anything teal.
You can borrow this sweatshirt.
Okay.
It's mint, but it's awfully close.
Yeah, I'm not good with my colors.
Emily thinks I'm partially color blind.
I think you might be too.
You might be.
So I'm gonna call this ASMR.
We've been getting a lot of follow up on this
from people that get that tingly feeling
and people like me that throw up
in their mouth a little bit.
Hey guys, been listening for a long time.
I'm always intrigued by the topics.
I'm a crafter.
And your show always keeps my mind moving
so my creativity can flow in the background.
Nice, that's the ideal situation.
Crafting, yeah.
I seriously thought I was the only person
who experienced ASMR.
Friends I've talked to about it in the past
and come crazy and I went around here
and knows anything about it.
I love the feeling I get when I can activate the sensation.
The best way I describe it is like for me
getting goosebumps inside my skull.
It's pretty good.
That's a great one.
I wish I knew what that felt like.
Yeah, I do too.
I envy that.
I want the sensation.
I don't have it.
The first time I found something that triggered it,
I was working in a small office
in a basement of a hospital.
It was getting repainted in the sound of the paint roller
and the people near me in the office set it off.
First I thought it was strange but I really enjoyed it
as our office started to grow up again
wearing headphones on a regular basis
and listened to the entire collection of Bob Ross painting
which I famously, or not famously,
but I go to sleep to that sometimes on Netflix.
So you don't have a problem with Bob Ross?
Oh no, I love it.
Okay.
Very soothing to me.
But I don't think, I mean, I don't think he's ASMR, is he?
Yeah, is he?
Yeah, we didn't say that in the episode.
I didn't think so.
Like a legendary ASMR trigger for some people, legendary.
All right, I listened to the entire collection
and found the soft sound of his voice
and stiff bristles on the canvas.
Caused the same reaction.
Helped me greatly with my anxiety
and general stress in the office actually.
I even created a playlist of people painting
and would listen to it when I was stuck in traffic.
As I'm writing, I'm listening to your episode
and yes, swallowing sounds can give me the tingles too.
Bob Ross swallows a lot when he's painting.
Gulp.
And his mic is on his collar.
I'm so excited guys.
I've never noticed that.
What, the swallowing?
Yeah.
You might have to have headphones on for that.
Okay.
I'm so excited guys, you have changed my life.
Thanks so much.
Goose bump headed Candace Tali, or Kitali.
Is it in there?
Yeah, that's a real name.
That might be her, her surname.
I got you.
May, uh.
Yeah, bearandmermaidart.com.
Nice.
I'm gonna shout out your craft site.
It's like jewelry and things.
Yeah.
It's not bear and mermaid art that I could see.
I got you.
It's just a whimsical name.
Gotcha.
Yeah, there's like, it's something about painting
like slows people down.
Like when you're painting and you're talking,
you're just that much calmer.
No one paints fast.
There's this dude, like if some artists
will paint, do Instagram live and paint.
Oh yeah?
I mean, I don't know if you remember him or not,
but the Gregory Jacobson, he was the artist
who came backstage at our Chicago show last time.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, he did this for years or for a year.
He had like some show coming
and he would just sit there and paint.
And you started watching him originally
and then she got me into it.
And it was just him painting.
He wasn't even in the shot normally, just his hand painting,
but he'd be talking about what he's doing
and maybe answering some questions.
And I never really thought about it before,
but it is like super laid back.
Something about painting makes you slow.
It just slows you down.
Well, it makes you swallow loudly.
You never hear from a painter or an artist is like,
I'm in a hurry, I gotta go knock this painting out real quick.
That's true.
Let me put some lens flares on there.
Or maybe, I don't know.
I guess you could be under a deadline.
He was under a deadline, if I remember correctly.
He had some huge show coming up
and I guess then he decided,
well, I think I'll add this extra complication
to this crazy deadline.
But yeah, it was interesting.
Thanks a lot, Candace, Nea.
If you wanna get in touch with us,
you can tweet to us at S-Y-S-K podcast.
You can join us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know.
Although who's on Facebook anymore, am I right?
Right.
You can join us on Instagram at S-Y-S-K podcast.
You can go to our website, stuffyoushouldknow.com.
You can go to my website, thejoshclarkeway.com
and you can send us a good old fashioned email
to stuffpodcastathowstuffworks.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.