| Their misperceptions are pretty 
                    much the same as women in the general popu-lation. One of 
                    the biggest: sexual assault is perpetrated by a stranger, 
                    someone that jumps out and drags the victim into the bushes 
                    – or kidnaps them. Yet, research has shown that 90 percent 
                    of sexual assault is by someone known by the victim.  Also, 75 percent of campus rape in Orange County involves 
                    alcohol. We’re talking about the age group of 15- to 
                    19-year-old women, and dealing with the combination of college 
                    freshmen free from their parents and drugs or alcohol – 
                    it’s a volatile combination. I encourage them to make 
                    wise choices and to remember that drugs and alcohol can make 
                    for an unsafe atmosphere. Many think sexual assault is not 
                    going to happen to them, and then when it does – by 
                    a friend or a roommate’s boyfriend that takes advantage 
                    because they have been drinking or doing drugs – they 
                    don’t call it sexual assault. They think it’s 
                    their fault because it was someone they knew.  Part of my job is encouraging former victims to talk about 
                    the assault, to get over an acquaintance rape by placing the 
                    responsibility on the person responsible for it – and 
                    then to move on. I give two messages to students: This is 
                    what sexual assault is, and this is how you can stay safe. 
                    The number one best rape prevention is communication – 
                    stating what is OK and not OK. |