Rape Racism and The Law
Rape Racism and The Law
Rape Racism and The Law
1983
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RAPE, RACISM, AND THE LAW
JENNIFER WRIGGINS*
INTRODUCTION t:~
The history of rape in this country has focused on the rape of white
women by Black men. From a feminist perspective, two of the most
damaging consequences of this selectiv~ blindness are the denials that
Black women are raped and that all women are subject to pervasive
and harmful sexual coercion of all kinds.
This Note examines the historical legacy of the racist social mean
ing of rape and its consequences. Part I describes the history of the
legal and societal focus on punishing Black men when the rape of
white women is claimed. Part II discusses the denial of the rape of
Black women. Part III argues that the narrow focus on one racial
combination of rape obscures the significance of the sexual coercion
•student, Harvard Law School.
Acknowledgments. Dozens of people contributed to the making of this Note, and the author
is indebted to each of them. Among those who helped in ways the author especially appreciates
are: Nia Burnette, Lisa Biow, George Chauncey, Jr., Rhonda Copelon, Christopher Edley,
Jr., Karen A. Getman, Geraldine Hines, Muhammed Kenyatta, Mary Ann Kopydlowski,
Catharine A. MacKinnon, Judy Miles, Stephanie Y. Moore, Lori J. Nelson, Lynn Paltrow,
Jane Schacter, Robin Wiener, and Mary Whisner. Without their support, advice, and criticisms,
this Note could not have been written. Special thanks are due to Mary Ellen Roy for her patient
editing. Responsibility for the views expressed herein lies with the author.
The word "Black" is capitalized in this Note when used to denote someone's race. The reason
for this has been well stated by Catharine MacKinnon:
MacKinnon, Feminism, Marxism, Method, and the State: An Agenda for Theory, 7 SIGNS
515, 516 (1982}. While a parallel argument could support the capitalization of "white," such
a usage would resonate with a long tradition of dominance by whites and is hence rejected.
103
all women face. Part IV argues that feminists must go beyond tradi
tional rape reform measures to stop sexual coercion.
There are many different kinds of rape. 1 Its victims2 are of all
races, 3 and its perpetrators are of all races. 4 Yet the kind of rape
1
By "rape" this Note refers not to the legal definition of rape or sexualqssault, but rather
to "any attempted or completed sexual act that is forced on an individual against his or her
will." Bowker, Rape and Other Sexual Assaults, WoMEN AND CluME IN AMERICA 180, 180
(L. Bowker ed. 1981). The term thus includes a wide range of situations, from a stranger
assaulting a woman in a dark alley to a husband forcing sex on his wife, regardless of whether
penetration is involved or the act is illegal. The term "illegal rape" refers to situations where
the imposition of sex is prohibited by law.
This Note addresses only the rape of women by men. Besides being the most prevalent and
widely-studied kind of rape, it is also an important manifestation of, and means of perpetuating,
male dominance. This Note argues that the treatment of this kind of rape by the legal system
also serves as a weapon of white dominance.
2
Rape statistics are notoriously unreliable. An initial problem with them is that they report
only activity which the law defines as rape. Illegal rape is not necessarily the only or most
harmful sex forced on victims. See MacKinnon, Feminism, Marxism, Method, and the State:
Toward Feminist Jurisprudence 8 SIGNS (forthcoming 1983); Comment, Rape and Rape Laws:
Sexism in Society and Law, 61 CAL. L. REv. 919, 941 (1973).
A second major problem with rape statistics is that underreporting even of illegal rape renders
them inaccurate. It is likely that Black women underreport more than white women, espe·
cially if the woman's assailant is white. See infra note 122. A recent estimate is that only one
in two illegal rapes is reported. Bowker, Women as Victims: An Examination of the Results
of L.E.A.A. ~National Crime Survey Program, in WOMEN AND CluME IN AMERICA, supra
note 1, at 158-64.
A third problem is that police often decide not to pursue rape complaints which may be
valid, especially if the complainant is Black, so these complaints may not appear in police
"reported rape" figures. Chappell, Geis, Schafer & Siegel, A Comparative Study of Forcible
Rape Offenses Known to the Police in Boston and Los Angeles, in FoRCIBLE RAPE 227, 235
(D. Chappell, R. Geis & G. Geis eds. 1977).
More accurate figures may be derived from victim surveys which involve interviewing a
random sample of citizens in a particular area concerning their victimization. It is from such
surveys that the estimated ratios of actual to reported rapes are derived. However, this method
has in some circumstances been found to underestimate the crime committed against Blacks.
Hood & Sparks, Citizens Attitudes and Police Practice in Reporting Offenses, in VJCTIMOLOGY
167 (1. Drapkin & E. Viano eds. 1974).
3
This Note focuses on rape between white and Black people in this country. It does not
deal with rape involving other people of color for several reasons. First, most of what has
been written about race and rape focuses exclusively on Black/white issues. (Exceptions include
J. WILLI.AMS & K. HoLMES, THE SECOND AssAULT (1981) [hereinafter cited as THE SECOND
AssAULT]; AEGIS, March-Apr. 1979 (special issue entitled Violence Against Women and Race);
Chu & Torres, Rape: It Can't Happen to Me!, BRIDGE: AN AsiAN AMERICAN PERSPECTIVE,
Spring 1979.) Second, critics of feminist rape literature have primarily addressed its failure
to combat the myth of the Black rapist and to recognize the differences between the vulnerability
of white and Black women as rape victims. See infra note 183. This Note attempts to begin
to correct these failures. A remaining failure is commentators' neglect of rape as it affects
other people of color.
4
See infra text accompanying notes 121-232.
that has been treated most seriously throughout this nation's history
has been the illegal forcible rape of a white woman by a Black
man.5 The selective acknowledgement of Black accused/white
victim rape was especially pronounced during slavery and through
the first half of the twentieth century. 6 Today a powerful legacy
remains that permeates thought about rape and race. 7
Slavery
After the Civil War, state legislatures made their rape statutes race
neutral, 18 but the legal system treated rape in much the same way
12
Thurman v. State, 18 Ala. 276 (1850); Dick, a slave, v. State, 30 Miss. 631 (1856).
13
S. BROWNMILLER, AGAINST OUR WILL)76 (1975); Evans, Rape, Race, and Research, in
BLACKS AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE 75, 79 (C. Owens & J. Bell eds. 1977); see \V. BOWERS,
ExECUTIONS IN AMERICA 173 (1974); A. L. HIGGINBOTHAM, IN nm MATTER OF CoLOR 282 (1978);
Blackwell, Social and Legal Dimensions ofInterracial Liaisons, in THE BLACK MALE IN AMERICA
219, 225 (D. Wilkinson & R. Taylor eds. 1977) [hereinafter cited as THE BLACK MALE); infra
notes 89-96 and accompanying text.
14
State v. Charles, a slave, I Fla. 298 (1847); Commonwealth v. Jerry Mann, 4 Va. (Va.
Cas.) 210 (1820); George, a slave, v. State, 37 Miss. 316 (1859); see infra text accompanying
notes 93-96.
15
See, e.g., Virginia Code of 1819 and 1823 Law (death penalty for rape or attempted rape
of a white woman by a slave, Black, or mulatto and term of I 0-21 years for rape by a white
man); Kentucky 1802 Code (death penalty for rape of a white woman by a slave and term
of years for rape by a white man). Bienen, supra note 8, at 173 n.14; Georgia Penal Code
of 1816 (death penalty for rape or attempted rape of a free white woman by a slave or free
person of color and term of not more than 20 years for rape or attempted rape by a white
man) No. 380 §§ 33-34; No. 508 and 509, § 2; Georgia Acts of 1816 § I, CoMPILATION OF
THE LAws OF GEORGIA 804 (Lamar ed. 1821), cited in Amicus Brief of Women's Legal Defense
Fund and Equal Rights Advocates at 17, Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.S. 584 (1977).
16
For example, rape by one's husband and rape not involving penetration by the penis were
not defmed as "rape." See H. FEILD & L. BIENEN, JURORS AND RAPE 154, 163 (1980) [hereinafter
cited as JURORS); MAcKINNoN, Violence Against Women: A Perspective, AEms, Jan. 1982
51, 53; MacKinnon, supra note 2; Comment, supra note 2, at 925-26.
17
The two most important rules were those allowing admission of evidence of the sexual
history of the victim and requiring extensive corroborating evidence of the rape. Berger, Man's
Trial, Woman's Tribulation, 77 CoLUM, L. REv. 1, 15-20 (1977); Note, The Victim in a Forcible
Rape Case: A Feminist View, 11 AM. CRn.1. L. REV. 335, 336 (1973); Comment, supra note
2, at 919; see infra text accompanying notes 140-163. Such rules were relaxed when the defendant
was Black. See infra text accompanying notes 145-151.
18
A compilation of all post-Civil War state legislation enacted prior to 1917 that mentioned
race contained no rape statutes. F. JOHNSON, THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATE LEGISLATION CON·
CERNING THE FREE NEGRO (1918). Such race-specific legislation included many anti-
as it had before the war. Black women raped by white or Black men
had no hope of recourse through the legal system. 19 White women
raped by white men faced traditional common-law barriers that pro
tected most rapists from prosecution. 20
Allegations of rape involving Black offenders and white victims
were treated with heightened virulence. This was manifested in two
ways. The first response was lynching, which peaked near the end
of the nineteenth century. 21 The second, from the early twentieth
century on, was the use of the legal system as a functional equivalent
of lynching, as illustrated by mob coercion of judicial
proceedings,22 sp.ecial doctrinal rules, 23 the language of opinions,24
and the markedly disparate numbers of executions for rape between
white and Black defendants. 25
Lynching
Between 1882 and 1946 at least 4715 persons were lynched, about
three-quarters of whom were Black. 26 Although lynching tapered
off after the early 1950s, occasional lynch-like killings persist to this
day. 27 The influence of lynching extended far beyond the numbers
miscegenation statutes. Id. at 8-10, 62-207. These statutes, providing criminal penalties for
interracial marriage, were declared unconstitutional only quite recently, in Loving v. Virginia,
388 U.S. 1 (1967}, and McLaughlin v. Florida, 379 U.S. 184 (1964).
For thorough general discussions of miscegenation see D. BELL, RACE, RAciSM AND AMERicAN
LAw 53-81 (1980); Applebaum, Miscegenation Statutes: A Constitutional and Social Pro
blem, 53 GEo. L.J. 49 (1964). For a more specific historical discussion, see J. JoHNSTON, RAcE
RELATIONS IN VIRGINIA AND ¥ISCEGENATION IN THE SOUTH 1776-186o (1970).
19
See infra text accompanying notes 101-112.
20
See supra note 16.
21
A. RAPER, THE TRAGEDY OF LYNCHING 1-2 (1933); C. WOODWARD, THE STRANGE
CAREER OF JIM CRow 43 (1974); Note, Constitutionality of Proposed Federal Anti-Lynching
Legislation, 34 VA. L. REv. 944 (1948).
22
See infra text accompanying notes 37-50.
23
See infra text accompanying notes 51-55.
24
See infra text accompanying notes 56-58.
l3 See infra text accompanying notes 59-63.
26
A. RoSE, THE NEGRO IN AMERICA 185 (1948) (citing a Tuskegee Institute study). A study
by the NAACP found the number of lynchings acknowledged by white officials between 1882
and 1927 to be 4951, with approximately 700Jo of the victims being Black. White, A State
ment ofFact [on Lynching], in A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE NEGRO PEOPLE IN THE UNrrED
STATES 19Io-1932, at 610 (H. Aptheker ed. 1973) [hereinafter cited as DocmmNTARY HISTORY].
27
In March 1981, in Mobile, Alabama, a 19-year-old Black man was beaten, strangled to
death, and left hanging from a tree by a rope tied in a noose. N.Y. Times, Mar. 23, 1981,
at A12, col. 6. There were suggestions by people in the community that he was killed for socializ
ing with white women, or that he was mistaken for a Black co-worker who was married to
a white woman. Id., Mar. 26, 1981, at Al6, col. 6. Three white men were arrested for the
murder but later released when a grand jury failed to return indictments. Id., July 28, 1981,
at A12, col. 6.
WoRLD THE SLAVEs MADE 336 (1976); G. LERNER, supra note 28, at 193; Mann & Selva, supra
note 5, at 169-70; Schmidt, Principle and Prejudice: The Supreme Court and Race in the
Progressive Era. Part 1: The Heyday of Jim Crow, 82 CoLUM. L. REv. 3, 444, 454 (1982).
36
State v. Petit, 119 La. 1013, 1016, 44 So. 848, 849 (1907) (quoting defense counsel). The
argument also reveals much about the way the legal system defined the rape of white women.
The house where the alleged rape took place belonged not to the victim but to "a white man"
and she was "his wife." A Black woman would not have received such protection from the
legal system and a white woman did only because she belonged to a white man. These dynamics
are discussed infra text accompanying notes 143-166. Also, note that the jury here is accurately
addressed by the defense counsel as "gentlemen," i.e., it consists entirely of white men, pro
bably landowners. See, e.g., Day v. Commonwealth, 43 Va. (2 Gratt.) 562 (1845); 44 Va.
(3 Gratt.) 629 (1846) (new trial for free mulatto defendant convicted of rape of white woman
because of evidence that one juror was not a landowner in the county where the trial was held).
37
The district attorney responded to the defense's claim in the Petit case, discussed supra
note 36, by arguing that a legal system controlled by whites made lynching unnecessary because
it had the same result:
During the reconstruction days, when we had negro domination in this state, the Kuklux
Klans were organized and the best people of the state shouldered their guns for the
protection of our white people. During those days white people were thrown into jail
and tried by negro justices of the peace and negro juries. Now we have no more negro
domination, but a government by the white people, and hence no necessity for lyn
ching ..•• [T]he fact that this negro is given a fair trial is no reason why you should
believe him innocent.
119 La. at 1016, 44 So. at 849 (quoting the district attorney) (emphasis added). Although the
defendant claimed the district attorney's argument was prejudicial, the Supreme Court of
Louisiana affirmed the conviction, commenting: "While this discussion of matters outside
of the record was highly improper, and should have been, in its inception, repressed by the
trial judge, we fail to perceive in the remarks of the district attorney any appeal to racial pre
judice for the purpose of influencing the jury." /d. at 1017, 44 So. at 849.
38
Chadbourn, infra note 39, at 332.
39
A. RAPER, supra note 21, at 143; Chadbourn, Plan for Survey of Lynching and the
Judicial Process, 9 N.C. L. REv. 330, 332-33 (1931); see Thompson v. State, Il7 Ala. 67,
23 So. 676 (1898) (change of venue granted for Black defendant accused of rape because threats
of mob violence threatened defendant's imminent death or would pressure jury into convic
ting); see also R. WILKINs, RAPE: A CASE HisToRY OF MURDER, TERROR AND lNrusncE VISITED
UPON A NEGRO CoMMUNITY (1949).
'll Chadboi,II'n, supra note 39, at 331.
41
Chadbourn, Lynching and the Law, 20 A.B.A.J. 71 (1934).
42
Burns, Black People and the Tyranny of American Law, 407 ANNALS, Spring 1973, at
156, 159-60.
43
Patterson v. State, 224 Ala. 531, 141 So. 195 (1932); Powell v. State, 224 Ala. 540, 141
So. 201 (1932); Weems v. State, 224 Ala. 524, 141 So. 215 (1932).
44
Powell v. State, 224 Ala. 540, 544, 141 So. 201, 204 (1932).
45
/d. at 548, 141 So. at 207.
46
Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45, 71 (1932).
47
Patterson v. State, 224 Ala. 531, 534, 141 So. 195, 196 (1932); Powell v. State, 224 Ala.
540, 545-46, 141 So. 201, 205-06 (1932).
The Georgia Supreme Court of 1899 was even more explicit about
the significance of race in the context of attempted rape, and par
ticularly about the motivations of Black men. It held that race may
properly be considered ''to rebut any presumption that might other
wise arise in favor of the accused that his intention was to obtain
the consent of the female, upon failure of which he would abandon
his purpose to have sexual intercourse with her." 55 Such a rebuttal
denied to Black defendants procedural protection that was accorded
white defendants.
Judicial attitudes toward the rape of white women by Black men
are also manifested in the factual descriptions of the crime in opinions.
Courts sometimes created pornographic images of the events of the
rape. 56 One court, for example, wrote, "[The victim,] while clad
only in her pajamas was forced to a remote spot some two blocks
from her home, where battered, bruised, bleeding and exhausted she
was overpowered .... " 57 The sense of disgusted fascination that
such opinions convey is not paralleled in cases where offender and
victim are both white. 58 •
The outcome of this disparate treatment of Black men by the legal
system was often the same as lynching-death.59 Between 1930 and
1967, thirty-six percent of the Black men who were convicted of raping
a white woman were executed. 60 In stark contrast, only two percent
55
Dorsey v. State, 108 Ga. 477, 480, 34 S.E. 135, 136-37 (1899). This rule was not used
where both parties were Black. See Washington v. State, 138 Ga. 370, 75 S.E. 253 (1912);
see infra text accompanying notes 106-108.
56
That the descriptions were pornographic was pointed out to the author by Karen
Getman.
"Maxwell v. State, 236 Ark. 694, 697, 370 S.W. 2d 113, 115 (1963); see Vanleeward v.
State, 220 Ga. 135, 136, 137 S.E. 2d 452, 453 (1964).
58
For example, in Rice v. State, 35 Fla. 236, 17 So. 286 (1895), the court drily notes "the
plaintiff in error was convicted of the crime of rape upon one Helen Smith, his stepdaughter."
59
In 1965, 18 American jurisdictions allowed the death penalty for rape. Wolfgang &
Reidel, Race, Judicial Discretion and the Death Penalty 407 ANNALS 120 (1973). Hugo Bed au
has written that most criminologists think capital punishment for rape was "introduced in
order to Keep the Nigras in line" and "had nothing to do with its deterrent effect." Bailey,
Rape and the Death Penalty: A Neglected Area of Deterrence Research, in CAPITAL PUNISH·
MENT IN TilE UNITED STATES 336 (H. Bedau & C. Pierce eds. 1975) (citing unpublished letter)
(emphasis in the original).
60
Wolfgang, Racial Discrimination in the Death Sentence for Rape, in EXECUTIONS IN
AMERICA, supra note 13, at 116. A systematic analysis of 1238 convictions for rape between
1945 and 1965 examined many variables in addition to race, such as presence of a weapon
and prior record of the defendant, to attempt to account for the disparate numbers of execu
tions. The study concluded that race was the only factor that accounted for the disparities.
/d. at 114-20. The Wolfgang study is unique in its methodology and conclusiveness. It sup
ports a larger body of prior research summarized in id. at 110-11.
61
Id. at 110-13; see Mann & Selva, supra noteS.
62
Wolfgang & Reidel, supra note 59.
63
Wolfgang, supra note 60, at 110-13. The NAACP-LDEF challenged the constitutionality
of the death penalty partly on the grounds that the execution rate disparities for rape con
stituted racial discrimination. M. MELTSNER, CRUEL AND UNUSUAL 73-105 (1973). This argu
ment was not accepted by the Supreme Court in its decision limiting the circumstances in which
the death penalty could constitutionally be imposed. See Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238,
92 S. Ct. 2726 (1972). A striking example of opposition to this type of argument is the response
of the Supreme Court of Arkansas in 1962 to evidence that over a recent 47 year period, 9SOJo
of the executions for rape had been of Black men (19 out of 20) and 72.90Jo of the executions
for murder had been of Black men or women (108 out of 148). See Maxwell v. State, 236
Ark. 694, 370 S.W.2d 113 (1963). The court rejected the idea that such statistics proved
discrimination, concluding:
Certainly there was no evidence offered even remotely suggesting that the ratio of violent
crimes by Negroes and Whites was different from the ratio of the executions. There
was no testimony suggesting that the State's attorneys in the various judicial districts
had not been asking for the death penalty in their prosecutions for rape, whether the
accused be black or white.
Id. at 701. This demonstrates an acceptance of the stereotypes of Black male criminality, see
supra note 34, and rapaciousness, see supra note 35.
64
Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.S. 584 (1977).
65
In almost half the states today, the maximum punishment for rape is life imprisonment.
JURORS, supra note 16, at 207-458.
65
LaFree, The Effect of Sexual Stratification by Race on Official Reactions to Rape, 45
AMBit. Soc. REv. 842, 852 (1980).
supra note 16, at 80. Recent victim survey data contradicts this prevalent belief; more than
four-fifths of illegal rapes reported to researchers were between members of the same race,
and white/Black rapes roughly equaled Black/white rapes. Bowker, supra note 2, at 172. In
that text, there is a misprint so that the sentence reads: "nearly four-fifths of all rapes were
interracial." /d. While the context makes clear that "intraracial" is intended, it is fascinating
that this particular typographical error slipped past all proofreaders. For a discussion of rape
statistics, see supra note 2.
72
See Abbott & Calonico, Black Man, White Woman- The Maintenance of a Myth: Rape
and the Press in New Orleans, in CRIME AND DELINQUENCY: DIMENSIONS OF DEVIANCE 141
(M. Riedel & T. Thornberry eds. 1974); Evans, supra note 13, at 75; Stem, The Right of the
Accused to a Public Defense, 18 HAR.v. C.R.-C.L. L. REv. (forthcoming 1983).
73
Several commentators have noted recent rape convictions of Black men accused of raping
white women that seem to be based on inadequate evidence. See A. DAVIS, WoMEN, RAcE
AND CLAss, 172-75 (1981); SociALIST WoMEN's CAucus oF ~oUISVII.I.E, THE RAciST USE OF
RAPE AND THE RAPE CHARGE (July 1975) (on me at the HARv. WoMEN'S L.J.); BRADEN, A
Second Open Letter to Southern White Women, 4 SoUTHERN EXPOSURE 50 (Winter 1977);
Evans, supra note 13, at 80.
74
Suffolk Superior Court Indictnient No. 025027-36, 025077 (1980).
75
See Stem, supra note 72; Sands, Rape and Racism in Boston: An Open Letter to White
Feminists, OFF OUR BACKS, Jan. 1980, at 16-17; THE WILLIE SANDERS DEFENSE CoMMITTEE,
FROM ScoTTSBORO 1930 TO BosTON 1980: THE FRAME-UP CoNTINUES (1980).
76
Hines v. State, 384 So. 1171 (Ala. Crim. App. 1980). This case was brought to the
attention of the author by Stephanie Y. Moore.
77
Id. at 1183.
Conclusion
From slavery to the present day, the legal system has consistently
treated the rape of white women by Black men with more harshness
than any other kind of rape. The punishment for Black of
fender/white victim rape has ranged historically from castration, to
death by torture and lynching, to executions. Today Black men con
victed of raping white women receive longer prison sentences than
other rape defendants. Innocent Black men also face the threat of
racially motivated prosecutions.
This selective focus is significant in several ways. First, since
tolerance of coerced sex has been the rule rather than the exception,
it is clear that the rape of white women by Black men has been treated
seriously not because it is coerced sex and thus damaging to women,
but because it is threatening to white men's power over both "their"
women and Black men. 81 Second, in treating Black offender/white
78
Id. at 1183.
79
Id. at 1181, 1183.
80
N.Y. Times, Nov. 22, 1980, at A17, col. 4.
81
Part of the reason for this social meaning of rape is that laws against rape originate in
the conception of women as property. SeeS. BROWNMILLER, supra note 13, at 7-10, 201; L.
CLARK & D. LEWIS, RAPE: THE PRICE OF COERCIVE SEXUALITY 115-32 (1977); THE SECOND
AssAULT, supra note 3, at 24; Comment, supra note 2, at 924-25.
In nineteenth century cases and literature, this notion sometimes took the form of discuss
ing women as "goods." For example, in one rape case where a slave was accused of raping
a white woman, force was an element of the crime, but since there was no evidence of force,
the Alabama Supreme Court wrote:
There was, in this case, at least some evidence tending to show that the act of the prisoner
was an attempt to accomplish his object by fraudulent personation of the husband •••.
[W]e depart from our usual course, for the purpose of inviting the attention of the
legislature to this subject. Under our penal laws, one who obtains the goods of another
under false and fradulent pretenses, is held guilty ... as if he had feloniously stolen
them. He who contaminates female purity under like fraudulent pretenses, goes un
whipped of justice.
victim illegal rape much more harshly than all coerced sex experienced
by Black women and most coerced sex experienced by white women,
the legal system has implicitly condoned the latter forms of rape.
Third, this treatment has contributed to a paradigmatic but false con
cept of rape as being primarily a violent crime between strangers where
the perpetrator is Black and the victim white. Finally, this pattern
is perverse and discriminatory because rape is painful and degrading
to both Black and white victims82 regardless of the attacker's race. 83
Who knows what the black woman thinks of rape? Who has asked
her? Who cares? -ALicE WALKER84
Lewis, a slave, v. State, 30 Ala. 54, 56-57 (1857). For explanations of how the conception
of women as property links with the creation of myths about the Black male as rapist, see
A. DwoRKIN, RIGHT-WING WoMEN 124 (1983); Mann & Selva, supra note 5, at 170.
82
Powerful poems about the effects of rape on its victims have been published in the last
decade, by both Black and white women. See, e.g., Jordan, Poem About My Rights, AEGIS,
March-Apr. 1979, at 31; M. PIERCY, Rape Poem, in LIVING IN THE OPEN (1976); Shange,
is noiso gd to be born a girl, 10 Tm BLACK ScHoLAR, May-June 1979, at 8-9. This is not
to assert that Black and white women's experiences have been identical. See Part II, infra
text accompanying notes 84-124.
83
Evans, supra note 13, at 81.
84 A. WALKER, Advancing Luna-and Ida B. Wells, in You CAN'T KEEP A GooD WOMAN
DOWN 85, 93 (1981).
85
Beale, Slave of a Slave No More: Black Women in Struggle, 12 THE BLAcK ScHOLAR,
Nov.-Dec. 1981, at 16.
86
Id.
mG. LERNER, supra note 28; BUT SoME OF Us ARE BRAVE: BLACK WoMEN's STUDIES (G.
Hull, P. Scott & B. Smith eds. 1982); CoNDmONs: FivE, Autumn 1979 (The Black Women's
Issue); 2 HEREsiES, Fall1979 (Third World Women: The Politics of Being Other); 8 SoJoURNER,
until quite recently. 88 Research about Black women rape victims en
counters all these obstacles.
Slavery
Mter the Civil War, the widespread rape of Black women by white
men persisted.97 Black women were vulnerable to rape in several
ways that white women were not. First, the rape of Black women
was used as a weapon of group terror by white mobs and by the Ku
Klux Klan during Reconstruction. 98 Second, because Black women
worked outside the home, 99 they were exposed to employers' sexual
aggression as white women who worked inside the home were
not. 100
The legal system's denial that Black women experienced sexual
abuse by both white and Black men also persisted, 101 although
94 ''Whites, perhaps originally to perpetuate breeding, encouraged the identity of Black
males in terms of uninhibited sexuality•••• It seems clear that the Black male was given sex
uallicense by the White patriarchy in exchange for his economic and political autonomy."
THE SECOND AssAULT, supra note 3, at 30-31; see B. HooKS, supra note 89, at 35; G. LERNER,
supra note 28, at 194. The "sexual license" of course did not extend to white women. !d. at 31-33.
The comparison between masters and slaves in George v. State, 37 Miss. 306 (1859), implies
that real standards of sexual restraint were applied to white men's behavior toward white women,
an assumption questioned in Part III of this Note, infra text accompanying notes 138-180.
9
' See supra text accompanying notes 5-17.
96
R. STAPLES, THE BLAcK WoMAN IN AMERICA 40 (1973); B. HooKS, supra note 89, at
32-34.
97 See H. GUTMAN, supra note 91, at 390; B. HooKS, supra note 89, at 52, 56-59; G.
supra note 89, at 46; Beckett, Working Women: A Historical Review of Racial Differences,
9 THE BLACK SociOLOOIST 5 (1982). Analyses of women's situations which assume the ''tradi
tional women's role" to be that of housewife, and treat ''women's" introduction into the
workforce as a relatively recent phenomena, effectively deny the existence of Black women.
While this denial has been pointed out in many publications, recent examples of it exist. See,
e.g., Taub & Schneider, Perspectives on Women:S Subordination and the Role of Law, in
THE Pounc:S OF LAw, supra note 8, at 125-26.
100
See B. HooKS, supra note 89, at 56-59. The myths concerning Black women's promis
cuity probably contributed to the sexual abuse of Black women by white employers.
101
Bell Hooks discusses newspaper articles urging the public to take action in opposition
to the rape of Black women, B. HooKS, supra note 89, at 56-59. The author of this Note
has been unable to find any legal literature on the rape of Black women either during or after
slavery.
statutes had been made race-neutral. 102 Even if a Black victim's case
went to trial-in itself highly unlikely 103 - procedural barriers and
prejudice against Black women protected any man accused of rape
or attempted rape. 104 The racist rule which facilitated prosecutions
of Black offender/white victim attempted rapes by allowing the jury
to consider the defendant's race as evidence of his intent, 105 for in
stance, was not applied where both persons were "of color and there
was no evidence of their social standing." 106 That is, the fact that
a defendant was Black was considered relevant only to prove intent
to rape a white woman; it was not relevant to prove intent to rape
a Black woman. By using disparate procedures, the court implicitly
makes two assertions. First, Black men do not want to rape Black
women with the same intensity or regularity that Black men want
to rape white women. 107 Second, Black women do not experience
coerced sex in the sense that white women experience it. 103
These attitudes reflect a set of myths about Black women's sup
posed promiscuity which were used to excuse white men's sexual abuse
102
See supra note 18.
103
The process that white rape victims must go through in pursuing a rape complaint bas
· been shown to be arduous and taxing. See L. HeLMSTROM & A. BURGESS, THE VICTIM OF RAPE:
INSTITUTiONAL REACTIONS 30-62 (1978) [hereinafter cited as THE VICTIM OF RAPEI; Note, supra
note 17, at 347-51; Comment, supra note 2, at 937-38; Comment, The Rape Victim: A Victim
ofSociety and the Law, 11 WILLAMEITE L.J. 36, 43-49 (1974) [hereinafter cited as Comment,
The Rape Victim]. The treatment by the legal system of a Black rape victim in the first half
Of this century was incalculably worse. SeeS. GRIFFIN, RAPE: THE POWER OF CONSCIOUSNESS
14 (1979) (description of the treatment Billie Holiday received after having been raped at age 10).
104
Traditional common-law rules which made rape generally a difficult crime to prove pro
tected the defendant. See infra note 159. In addition, Black women's claims were not taken
seriously regardless of the offender's race. In a 1971 study on judges' attitudes towards rape
victims, a judge was quoted as saying: "with the Negro community, you really have to redefine
rape. You never know about them." Bohmer, Judicial Attitudes Towards Rape Victims, 51
JUDICATURE 303 (1974). A vivid example of the judicial system's response to Black women's
claims of sexual harassment is the account by a nurse published in 1912:
I remember well the first and last work place from which I was dismissed. I lost my
place because I refused to let the madam's husband kiss me •..• I didn't know then
what has been a burden to my mind and heart ever since; that a colored woman's vir
tue in this part of the country has no protection. When my husband went to the man
who had insulted me, the man •.• had him arrested! I ••• testified on oath to the insult
offered me. The white man, of course, denied the charge. The old judge looked up
and said: 'This court will never take the word of a nigger against the word of a white man.'
More Slavery at the South, 72 THE INDEPENDENT, Jan. 25, 1912, at 197-200, reprinted in
G. LERNER, supra note 28, at 155-56.
105
See supra text accompanying notes 52-55.
106
Washington v. State, 38 Ga. 370, 75 S.E. 253 (1912).
107
See supra note 35.
108
See B. HooKS, supra note 89, at 52.
jurors shows a similar bias. A recent study found that sample white
jurors imposed significantly lighter sentences on defendants whose
victims were Black than on defendants whose victims were white. 114
Black jurors exhibited no such bias. m
Evidence concerning police behavior also documents the fact that
the claims of Black rape victims are taken less seriously than those
of whites. 116 A 1968 study of Philadelphia police processing deci
sions concluded that the differential in police decisions to charge for
rape "resulted primarily from a lack of confidence in the veracity
of Black complainants and a belief in the myth of .Black
promiscuity." 117
The thorough denial of Black women's experiences of rape by the
legal system is especially shocking in light of the fact that Black
women are much more likely to be victims of rape than are white
women. 118 Based on data from national .surveys of rape victims, 119
"the profile of the most frequent rape victim is a young woman,
divorced or separated, Black and poverty stricken." 120
Recent victim survey data shows that of the roughly one-fifth of
illegal rapes that are interracial, Black men were as likely to rape
white women as white men were to rape Black women. 121 The
statistics concerning Black women's rape by white men, however, may
be too low. Black women apparently underreport illegal rape to the
police-especially rape by white men 122 -and may do the same with
114
JURORS, supra note 16, at 106.
mId. at 119.
116
SeeM. AMIR, PATIERNS IN FoRcmLE RAPE 11 (1971); Peters, The Philadelphia Rape
Survey, in VICTIMoLOGY: A NEW Focus, VoL. III, CRIMEs, VICTIMS AND JurncE 186 (1. Drapkin
& E. Viano eds. 1975) [hereinafter cited as VICTIMOLOGY 111]; Note, supra note 17, at 343.
The relatively high credibility accorded white women's accusations of rape against Black men
was mitigated if the woman was known to socialize with Blacks.
117
Comment, Police Discretion and the Judgment that a Crime Has Been Committed
Rape in Philadelphia, 117 U. PA. L. REV. 277, 304 (1968).
118
Recent data from random citizen interviews suggest that Black women are much more
likely to be victims of illegal rape than are white women. Bowker, supra note 2, at 164; see
Karmen, Women Victims of Crime: Introduction 185, 188, in THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
AND WoMEN: OFFENDERS, VIcTIMS, WoRKERS (B. Price & N. Sokoloff eds. 1982).
119
See supra note 2.
120
Karmen, supra note 118, at 188.
121
Bowker, supra note 2, at 172.
122
There is conflicting commentary as to whether Black women are more or Jess likely than
white women to report rape to the police. Lee Bowker explains that the National L.E.A.A.
Survey published in 1976 found that, "[w]hite rape victims were much more likely to report
the crime to the police (590Jo) than were Black rape victims (360Jo)." Bowker, supra note 2,
at 173. Allen Johnson, however, claims, "the available evidence suggests that nonwhites are
more likely than whites to report their assaults." Johnson, On the Prevalence of Rape in the
Conclusion
From slave~ "the present time; the rape of Black women has
been denied by the legal system. During slavery, the rape of Black
women by Black men was legal. The rape of Black women by white
men was frequent, legal, and a crucial weapon of white supremacy.,
After the Civil War, the legal system's continued denial of the rape
of Black women was manifested in discriminatory doctrinal rules and
judicial language. Today Black women continue to suffer rape in
disproportionate numbers, while the criminal justice system still takes
the claims of Black rape victims less seriously than the claims of white
victims.
132
Sims v. Balkcom, 220 Ga. 7, 136 S.E. 2d 766, 769 (1964).
133
See Part I supra text accompanying notes 1-83.
134
It is important to acknowledge that to say that something furthers racism is not to deny
that it can also be sexist. LikeWise, to say that something contributes to sexism is not to deny
that it can also be racist. Racism and sexism are complementary, not contradictory. For fur
ther discussion, see Part IV, infra text accompanying notes 181-233.
135
These characterizations embody two types of disempowerment. First is the disempower
ment involved simply in having one's own experience defined by someone else. Second is the
disempowering content of the definitions imposed. Here, the treatment of the rape victim
after the rape is that of a stigmatized, ruined woman. An early description of the purported
effect of rape on a virgin is Camp v. State, 3 Ga. 417, 422 (1847), which stated that after
the loss of her virginity, "all is gone: her love of justice, sense of character, and regard for
truth." This extreme stigmatization is perhaps decreasing, Sagarin, Forcible Rape and the Pro
blem of the Rights of the Accused, FoRcmLE RAPE, supra note 2, at 142, but it nonetheless
persists in powerful forms. The stigma is often internalized, which is also disempowering.
See J. BARKAS, YICTWS 126 (1978); Peters, supra note 116, at 197.
136
See supra note 129 and accompanying text. Reynolds argues that society's desire to spare
the white woman the extreme humiliation she suffers from public cross-examination is the
force behind lynching. Reynolds, supra note 31, at 21. This characterization of the causes
of lynching is obviously incorrect. It uses false stereotypes of white women's extreme delicacy
and the false idea that society sincerely aimed to protect white women from rape (this idea
is refuted in Part Ill, supra text accompanying notes 125-180) to make lynching seem understan
dable and even noble.
137
See Reynolds, supra note 31, at 20-21.
138
It should be noted that lynching played a strikingly minor role in legal literature, as did
rape, until recently. The INDEX TO LEGAL PE.ruODICAJ.S lists a total of 39 entries for lynching
between 1791 and 1949 (the last year containing an entry on lynching). During the same time
period there were 53 entries for rape. By comparison, there were 775 entries under murder
and homicide during those years. From 1949 untill970 there were 51 articles about rape com
pared to 511 about murder or homicide. Between 1970 and February 1982 there were 187 articles
about rape and 362 about murder/homicide.
139
Rife, Scientific Evidence in Rape Cases, 31 J. CRIM. L. & CRIMINOLOGY 232 (1940) is
an exception. Recognizing the difficulties in proving rape, Rife details methods of obtaining
evidence to corroborate victims' testimony.
140
JURORS, supra note 16, at 168. For a discussion of statutory rape roughly contem
poraneous with the Patterson decision, see Comment, Criminal Law: Rape 19 KY. L.J. 339
(1931). See generally, Note, Statutory Rape: Previous Chaste Character in Florida, 13 U. FLA.
L. REv. 201 (1960); Note, Statutory Rape-Previous Chaste Character, 57 W.VA. L. REV.
199 (1955); Comment, Recent Decisions-Criminal Law-No Defense To Statutory Rape That
Victim Is Married Woman Below The Age Of Consent, 21 MD. L. REv. 84 (1961).
141
See, e.g., Evidence-Specific Acts of Unchastity by Prosecutrix, 14 GA. B.J. 362 (1953).
For a detailed and critical discussion, see Berger, supra note 17, at 15-22; see also J. BARXAS,
supra note 135, at 104; Holmstrom & Burgess, Rape: The Victim Goes on Trial in VtCTJMOLOGY
III, supra note 116, at 37-38; Note, supra note 17, at 338; Comment, The Rape Victim, supra
note 103, at 41; Comment, supra note 2, at 935, 938.
142
Berger, supra note 17, at 16; Note, supra note 17, at 335; Comment, supra note 2, at
931; Comment, The Rape Victim, supra note 103, at 39, 40.
143
See supra text accompanying notes 109-112.
144
See supra note 103.
discounted, and the issue of chastity was contested only in cases where
the rape complainant was a white woman.
For white women, evidence of unchastity was given less weight
when the defendant was Black. 145 A blatant example of the courts'
willingness to ignore victims' lack of chastity appeared in the Scotts
boro opinions. The Alabama Supreme Court demonstrated its deter
mination to affirm the defendants' convictions by its vigorous pro
tection of the reputation and credibility of the white woman who
claimed she was raped. It ruled that evidence pertaining to her marital
status, 146 her previous chastity/47 and her general reputation148 had
been properly excluded as irrelevant.
A less famous but equally vivid case also illustrates this dynamic.
In Story v. State, 149 where a Black man was charged with the rape
of a white prostitute, the Court found that her unchastity with white
men was not relevant to her unchastity with Black men, commenting
that: "The consensus of public opinion, unrestricted to either race,
is that a white woman prostitute is yet, though lost of virtue, above
the even greater sacrifice of the voluntary submission of her person
· to the embraces of the other race." 150
These rulings shielding the victim's reputation were contrary to tbe
weight of authority at that time. 151 Indeed, the debate in the legal
literature prior to the 1970s concerned not whether evidence of the
complainant's sexual history should be admissible, but rather the type
of evidence that should be admissible-specific sexual acts or only
the victim's general reputation. 152
Many feminists favor excluding evidence of the rape complainant's
sexual history because the admission of such evidence reflects and
t•s In the 19th century, evidence of a white woman's lack of chastity sometimes convinced
courts to treat Black defendants with relative leniency. See, e.g., Cato, a slave, v. State, 9
Fla. 163 (1860) (rape conviction of slave based on partly contradicted testimony of white pros
titute set aside and new trial granted). But see Barnett v. State, 83 Ala. 40, 3 So. 612 (1888)
(rape conviction of Black defendant on uncorroborated testimony of white prostitute upheld).
1
~ Weems v. State, 224 Ala. 524, 521, 141 So. 215, 217 (1932).
,., Patterson v. State, 224 Ala. 531, 536, 141 So. 195, 197 (1932).
'"Powell v. State, 224 Ala. 540, 550-51, 141 So. 201, 210 (1932).
,., 178 Ala. 98, 59 So. 480 (1912).
1
~ Id. at 104, 59 So. at 482.
m 1 WIGKORE, EVIDENCE § 200 (2d ed. 1923).
152
See Recent cases-Evidence-Admissability of Prior Acts of Unchastity Upon Issue of
Consent ofProsecutrix in a Rape Prosecution, 9 TEx. L. REv. 98 (1930). The author argued
that the better practice was to admit evidence of prior acts rather than general reputation "in
view of the gross injustice which might result from placing an innocent man at the mercy of
a lewd and unscrtJpulous woman." See Cross-examination ofProsecutrix in Rape Prosecution,
l9·GA. B.J. 95 (1956); 14 GA. B.J., supra note 141.
frequently made malicious rape charges and easily duped juries into
awarding convictions. 158
One result of the chastity and corroboration rules was that rape
was often a very difficult crime to prove. 159 Rapes where the woman
made her report too soon or not soon enough, 160 rapes where the
woman knew her assailant, 161 rapes where the woman did not resist
enough, 162 rapes where the woman was sexually experienced, 163 were
all difficult to prosecute successfully.
The attitudes manifested in the rape laws and expressed in the legal
literature extend to other areas of the criminal justice system. Police
have often been extremely insensitive to rape victims. 164 Rape com-
note 13, at 415-20; Berger, supra note 17, at 28. For example, a 1970 comment claimed that
"[w]omen often falsely accuse men of sexual attacks to extort money, to force marriage, to
satisfy a childish desire for notoriety, or ~o attain personal revenge. Their motives include
hatred, a sense of shame after consenting to illicit intercourse, especially when pregnancy results,
and delusion." Comment, 118 U. PA. L. REv., supra note 156, at 460; see Comment, 67 CoL
UM. L. REv., supra note 156, at 1138-39.
158
See, e.g., Note, Criminal Law-Rape-Evidence-Corroboration of Female
Pregnancy, 13 NEB. L. BULL. 184, 185 (1934-35) ("Because of the difficulty of refuting the
testimony of the prosecutrix, because of the tendency of juries to convict without weighing
carefully the evidence, and further, because the crime is one which is often maliciously pros
ecuted"). A 1967 commentator stressed the "inordinate danger that innocent men will be con
victed." Comment, 67 CoLUM. L. REv., supra note 156, at 1137. For a more thorough discus
sion of this notion see Berger, supra note 17, at 22. Feminist writers had responded that the
conviction rate for rape was actually extremely low. See Note, supra note 17, at 338; Com
ment, supra note 2, at 931, 935; see also infra note 187.
159
JURORS, supra note 16, at 100-01; Berger, supra note 17, at 29-32; Comment, The Rape
Victim, supra note 103, at 38-40.
160
Holmstrom & Burgess, supra note 141, at 41, report that a victim must make a "fresh
complaint" but if she does it is assumed by the police that she reported promptly merely in
order to get back in her husband's or boyfriend's good graces, not because the claim is real.
161
See Note, supra note 17, at 343-45; Comment, The Rape Victim, supra note 103, at 41.
The incidence of illegal rape by acquaintances is high; in victim survey data for 1973-1976,
approximately half the sexual assaults were by men their victims knew; Bowker, supra note
2, at 166, 169.
162
The resistance requirements for rape are an excellent example of the ways that the legal
system fails to protect women from rape. On the one hand, modem rape statutes require that
the victim's resistance be overcome by force or by violence or by threats of imminent bodily
harm. See, e.g., N.Y. PENAL LAW§ 130.00(8) (McKinney Supp. 1981); WASH. REV. ConE
ANN. § 9A. 44.010(5) (West Supp. 1981). On the other hand, rape victims who do resist are
more likely to be seriously injured than are victims who do not. See NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR
LAW ENFORCEMENT AND CRlMINAL JUSTICE, LEAA, FORCIBLE RAPE: FINAL PROJECT REPORT
(1978) cited in Field, Rape, in ENCYCLOPEDIA OF CRIME AND JUSTICE (S. Kadish ed. forthcom
ing 1983); Black Offender, supra note 122, at 134; Note, supra note 17, at 345-47.
163
See infra text accompanying notes 209-210.
164
S. BROWNMILLER, supra note 13, at 408; S. GRIFFIN, supra note 103, at 13-14; Note,
supra note 17, at 348; see York v. Story, 324 F.2d 450 (9th Cir. 1963), cert. denied, 376 U.S.
939 (1964). Traditionally police were trained to expect that rape was one of the most falsely
reported crimes. G. PAYTON, PATROL PROCEDURE 283 (1967), cited in Comment, supra note
117, at 277 n.6. Several recent studies claim that police have become more sensitive. See, e.g.,
THE VICTIM OF RAPE, supra note 103, at 38-41; W. SANDERS, RAPE AND WOMAN'S IDENTITY
82 (1980). The accounts of negative treatment experienced by many women become notorious
and thus have a disproportionately large impact on victims' reluctance to report and on the
image of the police, THE VICTIM OF RAPE, supra note 103, at 53-55. These studies do not
indicate whether police sensitivity towards women of color has increased; see supra note 122.
165
In one study, the "unfounding" determination by the pol\ce for forcible rape was 18%,
while for larceny it was only two percent. G. NETTLER, EXPLAINING CRIME 45 (1974), cited
in Robin, Forcible Rape: Institutionalized Sexism in the Criminal Justice System in TliE
CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM AND WOMEN, supra note 118, at 246.
166
See J. BARKAs, supra note 135, 107-29; S. BROWNMILLER, supra note 13, 404-07; E.
HILBERMAN, TliE RAPE VICTIM 17-19, 33-40 (1976); T. McCAHtLL, L. MEYER C< A. FISCHMAN,
THE AFTERMATH OF RAPE (1979); THE VICTn.! OF RAPE, supra note 103; Burgess & Holmstrom,
Rape Trauma Syndrome, in FoRCIBLE RAPE, supra note 2 at 315 [hereinafter cited as Rape
Trauma]; Note, supra note 17.
167
Johnson, supra note 122, at 145.
168
Russell & Howell, Revisions/Reports: The Prevalence of Rape in the United States
Revisited, 8 SIGNS (forthcoming Summer 1983). The researchers concluded that there is a 260Jo
probability that a woman will be a victim of a completed rape at some point in her lifetime,
and that there is a 46% probability that a woman will be a victim of a completed or attempted
rape at some point in her life, see Russell, Sexual Assault: The Prevalence and Incidence of
Forcible Rape and Attempted Rape of Females, 7 VICTIMOLOOY (forthcoming 1983).
169
"I have never been free of the fear of rape. From a very early age I, like most women,
have thought of rape as part of my natural environment-something to be feared and prayed
against like fire or lightning." S. GRIFFIN, supra note 103, at 3; seeS. BROWNMILLER, supra
note 13, at 449; Riger, Gordon & LeBailly, Women's Fear of Crime: From Blaming to Restrict
ing the Victim, 3 VICTIMOLOOY 274, 278-80 (1978) [hereinafter cited as Women's Fear of Crime].
170
A recent study found that women feared crime more than men, and that their greater
fear was rooted in a fear of rape. 93% of women expressed fear of the thought of rape. The
major practical effect on women of the fear of rape is a restriction of freedom of action.
Women's Fear of Crime, supra note 169, at 282-83. The researchers concluded: "The effect
of women's greater fear of crime is to produce social constraints upon them; women not heeding
those constraints may be punished not only by direct victimization, but also by being blamed
for their own victimization. The irony of course, is that these restrictions do not guarantee
that safety." Id. at 282-83; see Reynolds, Rape as Social Control, 8 CATALYST 62 {Winter 1974).
171
An essential element of the traditional common-law definition of rape is sexual inter
course including penetration by the penis, seeS. BROWNMILLER, supra note 13, at 424-25;
L. CLARK & D. LEWIS, supra note 81, at 130-32, 160; Bienen, supra note 8, at 174-75;
MacKinnon, supra note 2, at 15-16; Comment, supra note 2, at 83. Ignored by such a defini
tion are forced oral sex, fondling, and penetration with an object, for example.
172
E.g., acts other than sexual intercourse, N.J. STAT. ANN.§ 2C:14-1 (West Supp. 1982);
sexual assaults with an object, S.D. CODIFIED LAWS ANN. § 22-22-2 (Supp. 1982}.
173
E.g., IDAHO CoDE 18-6101, 6103 (1979); M1ssouru REv. STAT. § 566.040 (1979).
174
The spousal rape exemption has been abolished in only three states (New Jersey,
Nebraska, Oregon). JURoRS, supra note 16, at 196. All other states retain some version of
it, based on a notion that the decision to marry implies continual consent to sexual intercourse.
Id. at 165. The exemption originated in a conception of the wife as the sexual property of
the husband. Lord Hale explained, "[The] husband cannot be guilty of a rape committed by
himself upon his lawful wife, for by their mutual matrimonial consent and contract the wife
hath given up herself in this kind into her husband, which she cannot retract," Bienen, supra
note 8, at 184, quoting M. HALE, THE HISTORY OF THE PLEAS OF THE CROWN 629 (S. Emlyn
ed. 1778).
m The incidence of spousal rape is difficult to estimate, partly because it is legal in most
states. JURORS, supra note 16, at 163-66; see note 174. However, estimates of wife-battering
run as high as 50o/o of marriages, R. LANGLEY & R. LEVY, wn:E BEATING 4 (1977); and most
battered wives are apparently also victims of rape by their husbands, S. ScHECTER, WoMEN
AND MALE VIOLENCE: THE VISIONS AND STRUGGLES OF THE BATTERED WOMEN'S MoVEMENT
17, 223 (1982); L. WALKER, THE BATTERED WOMAN 108 (1979).
176
One estimate is that at least 200,000 girls a year are sexually molested, overwhelmingly
by men. L. SANFORD, THE SILENT Clm.DREN: A PARENT'S GUIDE TO THE PREVENTION OF CHILD
ABUSE 83 (1980). Another source estimates the number of incest victims at one million a year.
F. RusH, THE BEST KEPT SECRET: THE SEXUAL ABusE OF Clm.DREN, 2, 4-5 (1980). An estimate
by the Children's Division of the American Humane Association is that a minimum of 80,000
to 100,000 children are sexually molested each year. The pattern appears to be 97% male
offenders, 92% female victims. In the majority of the cases the molester is well-known to
the child; in one quarter, the molester is a relative. The Humane Association's figures were
women are sexually harassed on the job. 177 Women also face
harassment on the street. 178
Very little is done about these forms of sexual abuse, and what
has been done has largely been done by women themselves, in the
last decade. 179 Widespread societal ignorance and general denial of
sexual coercion by the legal system persist. 180
Conclusion
based on poor and disorganized families who came to the attention of social service agencies.
Most incest, however, probably occurs in intact families which escape Social service agencies'
attention; thus the actual incest incidence is probably much higher. Herman & Hirschman,
Father-Daughter Incest, 2 SIGNS 735, 736 (1977); seeS. BROWNMillER, supra note 13, at 307-12.
For personal analyses, see VOICES IN THE NIGHT: WoMEN SPEAKING ABoUT INt:EST (T. McNaron
& Y. Morgan eds. 1982); and Cottom, Resistance to Incestuous Assault, in FIGHT BACK126-27
(F. Delacoste & F. Newman eds. 1981).
177
C. MAcKINNoN, supra note 124, at 26-55.
178
Despite its ubiquitousness, very little has been published concerning street harassment.
See L. WALKER, supra note 175, 107-08; Benard & Schlaffer, The Man in the Street: Why
He Harasses, Ms., May 1981, at 18; di Leonardo, Political Economy of Street Harassment,
AEGIS, Summer 1981, at 51-56.
179
See, e.g., FIGHT BAcK!, supra note 176.
•ro The problems of sexual harassment, incest, and spousal abuse have received very little
attention and action until very recently. For examples of recent discussions of these prob
lems, see C. MAcKINNoN, supra note 124 at 158-74 (1979) (sexual harassment); F. RuSH, supra
note 176, at 137-38 (incest); L. WALKER, supra note 175, at 212-13 (spousal abuse).
Those who work against rape and other forms of sexual coercion
must be vigilant not to support this racist social meaning. Activists
must realize that the false image of rape sustained by the legal system
fosters fear and resentment between white women and Black people.
It is not true that efforts to fight racist abuses of rape charges
necessarily deny the reality of women's experiences of sexual coer
cion. Nor is it correct that efforts to fight sexist denials of women's
experiences of sexual coercion necessarily deny the reality of racist
abuses of rape charges.
One of the most degrading aspects of rape for victims has been
the treatment they receive from the criminal justice system. 192 One
don't step out of line."); MacMillan & Klein, FAAR Editorial, AEGIS, Summer 1981, at 5 ("Rape
is a mechanism used to terrorize and subjugate women in much the same way that lynching
has been used against blacks.").
This comparison between the functions of rape and lynching is problematic in several respects.
First, it suggests that it is simple to compare racism and sexism, and in fact implies that they
function in the same way. Actually, the two operate in complex and different, but related
ways, as this Note demonstrates. Second, the comparison in itself is ill-chosen. Rapes rarely
end in murder while lynchings by definition are murder, so from the potential \ictim's perspec
tive, the terror created by the threats of lynching and rape must be different. Third, the com
parison ignores the fact that the usual excuse for lynching Black men was actually the rape
of white women, so that to glibly compare the two is insensitive at best.
Certain aspects of lynching and rape may be meaningfully analogous. For example, the
fact that lynching was illegal but socially acceptable, Reynolds, supra note 170, at 64, is also
true of rape. Also, the seemingly random nature of both crimes and the attendant fear and
denial by potential victims that the randomness makes possible may make them comparable
in that respect. But much more historical analysis is needed before such parallels can be con
structively drawn. Works that begin this process include Aptheker, Woman Suffrage and the
Crusade Against Lynching 1890-1920, in WoMAN's LEGACY 53 (1982); Hall, supra note 30.
185
See Parts II and III, supra text accompanying notes 84-180.
1
~ See supra notes 164, 192 and accompanying text.
187
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT AND C!uMJNAL JUSTICE, LEAA, FORCIBLE
RAPE: FINAL PROJECT REPORT (1978) (one in 50 chance that a conviction will result if the rape
is reported).
183
See supra note 168.
189
D. R;JSSELL, supra note 184, at 284-86; Note, supra note 17, at 352. The philosophy
and implications of the women's self-defense movement are beyond the scope of this Note;
for a discussion of the movement, see Telsey, Karate and the Feminist Resistance Movement
in FIGHT BAcK!, supra note 176, at 184; see also James, Dolt Yourself Self-Defense in id.
at 201; and Telsey, Some Facts on Self-Defense in id. at 197.
190
See THE VICTIM OF RAPE, supra note 103, at 264-65; D. RussELL, supra note 184, at
287-88; Bienen, supra note 8, at 171; Rose, supra note 182, at 75-76; Note, supra note 17,
at 351-54.
191
SeeS. BROWNMILLER, supra note 13, at 436; J. MARsH, A. GEIST & N. CAPLAN, RAPE
AND THE LIMITS OF LAw REFORM 22-23 (1982) [hereinafter cited as RAPE AND THE LIMITS OF
LAw REFoRM]; BIENEN, supra note 8, at 171; Comment, The Rape Victim, supra note 103, at 54.
192
SeeS. BROWNMILLER, supra note 13, at 408-10; THE VICTIM OF RAPE, supra note 103,
at 1-4; Berger, supra note 17, at 23-24; Note, supra note 17, at 347-51.
193
SeeS. BROWNMILLER, supra note 13, at 434-37; Note, supra note 17, at 352.
194
See RAPE AND THE LIMITS OF LAW REFORM, supra note 191, at 22-23: THE VICTIM OF
RAPE, supra note 103, at 279; Rose, supra note 182, at 80; Note, supra note 17, at 353.
195
Howard, Battered and Raped: The Physical/Sexual Abuse of Women, in FIGHT BACK!,
supra note 176, at 80-81. ·
196
See THIS BRIDGE CALLED MY BACK, supra note 181 (especially pp. 61-101 including And
When You Leave, Take Your Pictures With You). See generally ToP RANKING (J. Gibbs &
S. Bennett eds. 1980) (especially Cornwall, Notes From a Third World Woman 61; Gwendolyn,
Righteous Anger in Three Parts: Racism in the Lesbian Community-One Black Lesbian's
Perspective 10; Calderone & Charoula, The Personal is Political Revisited: An Exploration
ofRacism in the Lesbian Community 79); Bethel, What chou mean we, white girl? 86 CoNDI
TIONS: FIVE, Autumn 1979 (The Black Women's Issue); Smith, supra note 87.
197
Both men and women were included in the studies of beliefs about rape, supra note 71,
which showed that most people incorrectly believed the most common racial combination in
rape cases was Black offender/white victim. Similarly, the study of white jurors which showed
that the heaviest sentences were given to Black men accused of raping white women, supra
note 67, was based on a sample of both female and male jurors. Many white feminists have
been reluctant or have refused to support Black men falsely accused of raping white women.
See Braden, supra note 73; Sands, supra note 75. Angela Davis eloquently exposes the con
tributions of several white feminists' work to the perpetuation of racism with respect to rape.
A. DAVIS, supra note 73, 178-82, 198-99. Even more recent writings which have ideological
roots in feminism contain inaccurate statements which perpetuate racism. A most striking
example appears in WoMEN AND CRIME IN AMERICA, supra note I. This book, published in
1981, is intended to fill the need for a text on women in the criminal justice system, id. at v.
When an interracial rape occurs today, it is most likely to be a black rapist and a white
victim, which is a reversal of the historical situation that existed in the United States
during the days of slavery and the decades that followed its termination. During this
period, it was black women who were constantly in danger of being sexually assaulted
by white men.
/d. at 182. First, this statement is empirically false, as is acknowledged several pages earlier:
"[Based on the 1975 LEAA crime survey data] Blacks were about as likely to rape whites as
whites were to rape blacks in the limited proportion of rapes that were interracial." /d. at
172. Second, even if.it were true that the number of illegal rapes committed by Black men
against white women outnumbered white rapist/Black victim rapes, the vulnerability of white
women would not be analogous to the vulnerability of Black women to white masters during
slavery. To suggest such a comparison is offensive because it denies the seriousness of Black
women's sexual victimization. See Part II, supra notes 89-124 and accompanying text. In ad
dition, the analogy resonates with a mythology that defines Black men as rapists of white
women. See supra note 35.
198
In one recent study only about three percent of the rape victims commented specifically
on the sex of the police officers who investigated their cases, although all were male; most
of the victims' responses about the police were positive, although 10% had serious complaints
about their treatment by police. THE VIcml oF RAPE, supra note 103, at 51, 53-54.
199
See supra note 194.
200
THE VIcmt OF RAPE, supra note 103, at 179-83; Note, supra note 17, at 350-51;
Comment, The Rape Victim, supra note 103, at 45-46.
201
See note 153.
202
Michigan's sexual assault statute, which took effect in 1975, is widely considered one
of the nation's most innovative and comprehensive rape laws and has served as the model
for many states. Bienen, supra note 8, at 172. The most detailed published research on the
impact of rape laws deals with Michigan. See RAPE AND THE Ln.rrrs OF LAw REFoRM, supra
note 191. For these reasons, the discussion on reforming rape laws is limited to Michigan.
203
RAPE AND THE Ln.rrrs OF LAW REFORM, supra note 191, at 68-71.
204
/d. at 106-107.
that 780Jo of persons fatally shot by police during 1973 and 1974 were Black. C. MILTON, J.
HAu.EcK, J. LARDNER&: G. ALBRECHT, POLICE USE OF DEADLY FORCE 19, 22 (1975). Black
women are not immune from police violence. SeeR. KNooHUIZEN, R. FAHEY & D. PALMER,
THE POLICE AND THEIR USE OF FATAL FORCE IN CHICAGO 20 (1972); Los Angeles Board of
- Police Commissioners, Concerning the Shooting ofEula Love, reprinted in 14 CRIME & Soc.
JusT., Winter 1980, at 2. See generally D. BELL, supra note 18; A. L. HIGGINBOTHAM, supra
note 13; Burns, supra note 8.
215
See Parts I and II, supra text accompanying notes 1-124.
216
F ·E AND THE LIMITs OF L.Aw REFoRM, supra note 191, at 27.
217
See supra note 67.
218
See Braden, The Ku Klux Klan Mentality-A Threat in the 1980's, 20 FREEDOMWAYS
7 (1980).
219
For example, for limitations on federal habeas corpus rights, see Engle v. Isaac, 102
S. Ct. 1558 (1982}, reh. den., 102 S. Ct. 2286 (1982); Rose v. Lundy, 102 S. Ct. 1198 (1982);
Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U.S. 72 (1977}, reh. den., 434 U.S. 880 (1977); Stone v. Powell,
428 U.S. 465 (1976}, reh. den., 429 U.S. 874 (1976).
220
Williams and Holmes claim that "To a great extent, the lack of credibility given the
charge of rape today is attributable to the interwoven history of rape and racism where all
involved know from their own experience (whether that of White male oppressor, White female,
or Black male) that rape has been a technique of social control to maintain the White Patriar
chy." THE SECOND ASSAULT, supra note 3, at 35.
221
See Rudovsky, The Criminal Justice System and the Role of the Police, THE POLITICS
OF LAW, supra note 8, at 242-52. For example, the shooting of civilians by police officers,
Conclusion
see supra note 214, almost invariably goes unpunished-out of 1500 killings of civilians by
police from 1960-1970, only three resulted in criminal punishment, according to a study by
A. Kobler, Police Homicide in a Democracy, 31 J. OF Soc. IssUEs, Winter 1975, at 163-64.
222
The illegality of consensual sexual acts other than penis-vagina intercourse between
unmarried persons is an excellent example. See People v. Onofre, 51 N.Y .2d 476 (1980}, cert.
denied, 101 S. Ct. 2323 (1981) (New York's prohibition against consensual sodomy held
unconstitutional on privacy and equal protection grounds); Note, The Constitutionality of
Laws Forbidding Private Homosexual Conduct, 72 MICH. L. REv. 1613 (1974).
223
Strong evidence suggests that Black defendants generally receive longer sentences than
do white defendants for most crimes. See JuRORS, supra note 16, at 117; Owens, Looking
Back Black in BLACKS AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE, supra note 13, 7 at 11.
224
See Rudovsky, supra note 221, at 244; Taub & Schneide.r, supra note 99, at 117. Janet
Howard notes that "given the history and nature of the 'justice' system, [using the legal system)
can only bring small concessions to women's safety, and is more likely to strengthen the
repressive, racist power of the police, the courts, and the prisons." Howard, supra note 195,
at 82.
225
See supra text accompanying notes 74-80.
226
See Sands, supra note 75.
227
Sagarin, supra note 135, at 148.
228
The targetting of Black men for punishment also affects Black women. Alice Walker
writes, "Whenever interracial rape is mentioned, a black woman's first thought is to protect
the lives of her brothers, her father, her sons, her lover. A history oflynching has bred this
in her." A. WALKER, supra note 84, at 93; see A. DAVIS, supra note 73, at 173-74.
CONCLUSION
. . . Eyes that only see the bruises inflicted by men miss seeing other
bruises and deep scars. -JANET HowARn233
The legal system's treatment of rape both has furthered racism and
has denied the reality of women's sexual subordination. It has
disproportionately targetted Black men for punishment and made
Black women both particularly vulnerable and particularly without
219
See supra notes 171-178 and accompanying text.
230
See Part I, supra text accompanying notes 1-83.
231
See supra notes 171-178 and accompanying text; see also Hoagland, Violence, Victim
ization, Violation, 15 SINISTER WISDOM, Fall 1980, at 70.
232
Susan Brownmiller observes that "If protection of the bodily integrity of all children
is to be genuinely reflected in the law, and not simply the protection of patriarchal interests,
then the current division of offenses (statutory rape for outsiders; incest for a member's fam
ily) must be erased." S. BROWNMIIJ.ER, supra note 13, at 429.
233
Howard, supra note 195, at 80.