The poster was created by the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base sexual response coordinator. "Preventing
Stevens, a 10-year veteran of the armed forces and a battalion commander in the Ohio National Guard, told Business Insider that it reflects a key problem of the
With an estimated 26,000 sexual assaults in the military last year and less than 3% of them resulting in punishment for the perpetrators, it's incredible that those in charge of preventing and responding to sexual assault would think the answer would involve telling prospective victims not to get sexually assaulted.
Stevens said it's one of the biggest problems in the military's sexual assault prevention and response strategy.
"I think this is part of the reason victims are afraid to report incidents," Stevens said. "If you're a victim and you've done one of the things on that list, you now feel like its your fault that you were sexually assaulted."
So she did something about it. Stevens wrote a letter detailing what information victims of sexual assault should know, and she posted it over the Air Force's poster.
— Jennifer Stephens (@JDStephens012) July 30, 2013
She also wrote an email to the sexual assault response office at the base. In it, she implored the coordinators to "promote culture change and support victims as opposed to tearing victims down by plastering these types of posters all over the base."
"Please take a moment to think about how you would feel if you had been assaulted and you went to a [Sexual Assault Response Coordinator] or Victims Advocate and one of the first questions they asked you was what you were wearing or if you were alone or if you were drunk," she wrote.
An effort by Business Insider to reach out to the sexual assault response office at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base was met with a carefully crafted statement from their public affairs office that would “preclude the need for an interview.”
"We have implemented robust training for all Airmen designed to both deter potential offenders as well as give Airmen the awareness and tools they need to step in and stop assaults from taking place," the statement said.
What the statement didn't specifically say was the hours, methods, or repetition of the base's training, nor did it mention the content of said training (and certainly "robust" means there's lots of content to share).
Needless to say, the base didn't offer up so much as a PowerPoint presentation.
"The training doesn't help," Stevens said. "In all my years in the military, I've never heard anyone say anything about what's being done to stop the perpetrators. It is absolutely alarming."