Today's Article
During Palin's tenure
as mayor of Wasilla,
the town 'billed sexual
assault victims...for
the cost of rape kits
and forensic
examinations.'
The American Spark
Palin Allowed Billing Of Rape Victims For Forensic Exams

By Cliff Montgomery - Sept. 15th, 2008

As running mate for Republican presidential nominee John McCain (R-AZ), Alaska Governor Sarah Palin has
worked to portray herself as a role model for women. But during her tenure as  mayor of Wasilla, the little town
of a few thousand inhabitants "billed sexual assault victims and their insurance companies for the cost of rape
kits and forensic examinations," stated an
Associated Press story on Friday.

Palin served as Wasilla's mayor for four years before the billing of apparent rape victims was finally
stopped--but it wasn't stopped by Palin. The charges only ended after horrified state lawmakers got wind of
them in 2000, and passed a law which forced the tiny town to end the practice.

Alaska state lawmakers in 2000 discovered that the Wasilla police department was "charging sexual assault
victims for the kits and the forensic exams, which cost from $300 to $1,200 at the time," according to
AP.

The kit in question was "a package of sample containers, swabs and other medical supplies," which "is used to
collect evidence from women after they are attacked," stated the
AP report.

Tony Knowles, who was Alaska's governor in 2000, told reporters on Thursday that Mayor Palin's town was the
only one in the state which was "charging rape victims for the cost of doing the law enforcement necessary for
solving the crime," according to the
AP article.

The state government outlawed the charges over the staunch objections of Charlie Fannon, then Wasilla's
police chief. Fannon cried that without the billings, the town's government would be forced to produce enough
money to both purchase the rape kits and perform the exams.

It seemed to escape Wasilla Police Chief Fannon that the protection of law-abiding citizens from those who
harm them is the sole reason Americans pay taxes or put up with a government in the first place.

Former Democratic House member Eric Croft, the person who sponsored the bill ending Wasilla's bizarre
charges, told
AP that then-Mayor Palin was almost certainly aware of her town's billings of apparent rape
victims.

Maria Comella, a McCain-Palin campaign spin doctor, claimed to
AP that Palin "does not believe, nor has she
ever believed, that rape victims should have to pay for an evidence-gathering test." To say otherwise, added
Comella, is a "misrepresentation of her commitment to supporting victims and bringing violent criminals to
justice."

Comella also told
AP that Governor Palin has done a number of things to "tackle the problem[s] of sexual
assault and rape." But apparently
AP did not push Comella to produce a single, verifiable instance in which
Palin clearly has pushed for legislation designed to protect the rights of rape or sexual assault victims. In any
case,
AP did not provide such a proof.

What
is clear is that a politician--and those paid to provide the best spin--will always claim to stand for the most
thoughtful, responsible values and ideals of the people.

But it's what a politician actually
does--or, in this case, what that person clearly fails to do--that reveals who he
or she really is.

A mayor who fails to stop a reprehensible law enforcement practice in her own town, one which charges
apparent rape victims for the collection of evidence against their apparent rapists, may claim to have failed
women and children out of honest ignorance. But only if that politician admits to a dangerous incompetence.

Any other reason for such a failure is too disturbing for words.



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