Does Utah have a higher-than average rate of child molestation? Is it connected with polygamy?
Also, if it were higher child molestation rates, then I would expect Utah to have a higher rate of males being raped. Do we have anything to back that up?
Finally, if the church were fostering this rape epidemic (albeit indirectly since the church despises sexual abuse), then do we have any stats on the perpetraitor's religion? I would think that would help us to identify whether it's because of the LDS church. Granted it wouldn't be proof. It could be that somone with LDS friends would be influenced by it too. Still, those sort of stats seem doable if the victim knows who the perp was as many seem to.
I'm still looking for more information about child molestation. I'm leaving shortly so it may have to wait.
I have not found any stats on religion at all. They have stats on income and race, but not religion, as far as I can find.
Another article about rape in Utah:
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,515039389,00.htmlPROVO — More than 90 percent of rapes in the city go unreported, according to the lead rape investigator for the BYU Police Department.
BYU officer Arnie Lemmon said only 43 rapes were reported last year in Provo, leaving the actual number of rapes estimated at more than 400 during 2002.
Lemmon spoke to a group of women on the BYU campus Thursday night as part of a monthlong lecture series titled "What's Lurking in Utah Valley?" to raise awareness
"The sexual predator is alive and well in this community as well as over the world," Lemmon told the women. "I don't want you to feel like this is Rapeville, USA, because it's not. . . . We try to do everything we can to combat it, but it happens."
Four sexual assaults were reported on the BYU campus last year, and Lemmon said there is a rape reported nationally every 5.8 minutes.
Lemmon said most Provo residents are religious and have a tendency to stigmatize discussion of sexual assault and sometimes to demonize the survivor.
He said he developed this opinion about 25 years ago when he moved to Provo and investigated the case of a first-semester freshman — the most common profile of a BYU rape victim — who was abducted while walking home from the campus library. The man took her inside his car and drove to Kiwanis park where he raped and sodomized her and threw her out of the car. It was nearly two years before the woman was emotionally stable enough to talk to Lemmon about the rape. "She said something that blew me away. She said, 'I should have died before I let him do that to me,' " Lemmon said. "I was troubled that she had to believe that."
Lemmon read from a letter written by a BYU rape victim who shared a similar belief.
"I'm a perversion to the good saints of my church," wrote the victim, who said she wished she were dead. Tragic thoughts like these are common among rape victims in Provo, Lemmon said.
Lemmon said rape survivors need to understand that God still loves them, that they are still "clean and pure," and that they have their whole lives ahead of them.
Otherwise, he said, "We're sending women the wrong message. We're saying 'You should be dead. You're a sinful woman because you survived. In a rape setting, there is no loss of virtue or chastity.' "
What really bothers me about this is that back in the dark ages, when I was a student at BYU, we also had this problem - young women thinking they should fight even at the risk of losing their lives rather than "allow" themselves to be raped. I know this was a problem because the local police dep't arranged educational meetings for young women, in which the female detective emphasized to us that this thinking is distorted. Yet I remember some of us talking among ourselves afterward and just not being able to let go of this idea, which Kimball's statement I quoted above demonstrates. I mean, who are you going to believe? A cop or the prophet of God?
And, by the way, this idea is also enshrined in LDS scriptures: Moroni 9:9
And not withstanding this great abomination of the Lamanites, it doth not exceed that of our people in Moriantum. For behold, many of the daughters of the Lamanites have they taken prisoners; and after depriving them of that which was mot dear and precious above all things, which is chastity and virtue –
And after they had done this thing, they did murder them in a most cruel fashion.