The Anoka County Attorney's Office acknowledges merit in the surface theme of Grier Weeks' "How is court handling sexual violence cases?" (Opinion Exchange, May 22). Sex crimes are abhorrent, and we'd like to see justice served in every case.
We disagree, however, with the undercurrent of Weeks' commentary, which implies prosecutors are disinterested in actual justice, so long as they are re-elected.
The argument is difficult to follow as the writer jumps from one issue to another, beginning with "child sexual abuse and rape," to the broader "sexual assault," then back to "victims under 13," and finally landing on "sexual exploitation crimes." This misdirection has a dizzying effect.
Weeks highlighted statistics from a handful of Minnesota counties, including Anoka County. He wrote: "Taking sexual violence seriously is about more than prosecution rates alone. Ramsey County and neighboring Anoka County prosecuted sexual assault at similar rates but with dramatically different outcomes. In Ramsey, 72% of sexual assault cases against adults brought by St. Paul prosecutor John Choi and his predecessor resulted in prison sentences. In Anoka, under prosecutor Tony Palumbo, just 33% did."
The author conflates prosecution and conviction rates. A prosecution rate is the rate at which referred cases are charged. Conviction rates refer to charged cases resulting in convictions. But Weeks takes the confusion an extra step and offers instead a sentencing statistic.
He inaccurately states that Anoka and Ramsey counties "prosecuted sexual assault at similar rates." In Ramsey County, according to their 2018 report, about 30% of reports reviewed by law enforcement were referred to the county attorney's office, and 37% of those were charged.
Anoka County law enforcement agencies refer 100% of criminal sexual conduct cases to the County Attorney's Office. Our prosecution rate is 42%.
Using the same data Weeks used from the Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines Commission, here's the Anoka County breakdown for 2007-2016: