Types Of Sexual Abuse
Sexual abuse describes a range of nonconsensual, harmful behaviors directed at a victim’s sexual characteristics. While the targets of sexual abuse are often women and children, men may also be victimized. Sexual abuse may include non-violent acts, such as unwanted touching and cyberbullying, as well as rape and sexual assault.
Sexual abuse is an act of cruelty, even if no physical contact is involved. In all cases, perpetrators deliberately target someone they perceive as weaker than them, with the goal of humiliating and/or controlling their victim. The many types of sexual abuse include the following:
- Rape and sexual assault, including date rape
- Unwanted touching
- Forced participation in lewd or degrading acts
- Child molestation
- Child pornography
- Threats and harassment, including cyberbullying
- Human trafficking
Those who commit sexual abuse inflict psychological and emotional pain on their victims and may physically injure them as well. The scars of sexual abuse may persist for a lifetime.
Rape and Sexual Assault
Sexual assault is known to be widespread and underreported. It has been estimated that less than 25 percent of sexual assaults are reported to the police. The annual Criminal Victimization report published by the U.S. Bureau of Justice indicates that the number of self-reported sexual assaults against victims aged 12 and older has been increasing. In 2018, more than 734,000 cases of sexual assault were reported, representing nearly a 70 percent increase since 2015.
Legal Definitions of Rape and Sexual Assault in California
The precise legal definition of rape varies by state. California defines rape as sexual intercourse, differentiating crime from sodomy and forcible acts of penetration. California also distinguishes between rape of a spouse and rape of a person who is not a spouse. Various forms of rape include gang rape, serial rape, and incest. Rape entails a lack of consent on the part of the victim, described in the statute as including the following circumstances:
- The perpetrator accomplished the act by force, violence, duress, or threat of immediate bodily injury
- The victim was mentally or physically unable to give legal consent
- The victim was intoxicated, unconscious, or asleep
- The perpetrator fraudulently represented the act of penetration as serving a professional purpose
- The perpetrator was pretending to be someone else known to the victim
- The perpetrator threatened future harm, including kidnapping or imprisonment
- The perpetrator threatened to use their perceived authority to arrest, incarcerate, or deport the victim
In 2018, the number of forcible rape cases reported in California exceeded 15,500, the highest of any state in the U.S. It is estimated that about two million women in California and at least 23 million women across the country are rape survivors.
Date Rape and Intimate Partner Violence
Date rape is a non-legal term used to describe situations in which victims have been romantically or potentially sexually involved with the perpetrator. Some studies suggest that date rape is the most common form of rape. Most victims of date rape are in their late teens or early 20s. Very often, they are college students who either knowingly or unwittingly consumed alcohol or date rape drugs, including the following:
- Flunitrazepam, also known as roofies
- Ketamine, also known as Special K
- Gamma hydroxybutyric acid, also known as ecstasy
California laws against rape and sexual assault apply to date rape. Intimate partner violence is similar to date rape, in that both partners know each other. However, the violence may not be sexual, and alcohol or date rape drugs may not be involved. According to the National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence (NIPSV) survey, victims of intimate partner violence commonly experience the following negative impacts:
- Feeling fearful
- Concern for their safety
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
It is estimated that nearly one in four women, and one in seven men experience intimate partner violence.