Sen. Claire McCaskill fiercely defended her military sexual assault bill on Thursday, calling it a “great hybrid” after slamming her colleague’s proposal to completely remove commanders from the prosecution process.
“The problem we’ve had is not the commander saying no to cases going forward, the problem we have is victims getting the help, getting the assistance, and making sure the commander can’t come in and overturn a jury conviction,” the Missouri Democrat said on Thursday’s Morning Joe.
A proposal brought forward by New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand would have removed prosecutions of sexual assault cases from the military’s chain of command. The measure however was rejected in the Senate Armed Services Committee last week and replaced by one that would keep review decisions on incidents of sexual assault within the purview of senior officers.
In a sharp rebuke of Gillibrand’s proposal, McCaskill said service members would more likely face retaliation if cases of sexual assault were to be handled outside of their commanding officer’s jurisdiction.









