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Forbes - Business

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Goal Of Zero Tolerance Of Sexual Abuse In Prison Vs Reality: GAO Report
Walter Pavlo · 2026-05-09 · via Forbes - Business
Man behind bars

The Government Accountability Office came out with a report on the Federal Bureau of Prisons' Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA). So far, the goal of the act has not lived up to its lofty goals.

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More than two decades after Congress declared “zero tolerance” for prison rape, a new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) shows just how far the federal prison system still has to go.

The findings are sobering. Thousands of allegations. Systemic blind spots. Oversight tools that may be measuring compliance without actually detecting abuse. And a culture inside prisons that still discourages victims from coming forward.

To understand why this matters, it helps to go back to the moment when the federal government first tried to confront the problem head-on.

The origins of PREA

In 2003, Congress passed the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) unanimously. At the time, the issue of sexual abuse in prisons had gained national attention through investigative reporting, advocacy efforts, and mounting evidence that abuse was far more widespread than most Americans realized.

PREA was intended to be transformative. It did not just acknowledge the problem. It attempted to build a system that could measure it, prevent it, and hold institutions accountable.

The law established a clear objective: zero tolerance for sexual abuse in correctional facilities. It created a national commission to study the issue and required the Department of Justice to develop standards that would apply across federal, state, and local systems.

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Nearly a decade later, in 2012, those standards were finalized. They required prisons to implement policies for preventing and detecting abuse, to provide multiple ways for victims to report it, and to investigate every allegation. They also introduced regular audits to assess whether facilities were complying with the rules.

For the first time, the United States had a national framework aimed at eliminating sexual abuse behind bars.

PREA’s Purpose

PREA was never just about rules on paper. Its real goal was cultural change.

The standards were designed to force correctional systems to take sexual abuse seriously at every level. Facilities were required to train staff, educate incarcerated individuals about their rights, collect and publish data, and conduct internal reviews after incidents.

A key feature of the system is the audit process. Every facility must be audited at least once every three years by certified auditors. These audits are meant to evaluate whether a prison is meeting PREA standards and maintaining systems capable of preventing and responding to abuse. The BOP publishes these reports for each of its facilities. Here is an example of a PREA report from a female federal prison camp.

In theory, the framework is comprehensive. It covers prevention, detection, reporting, investigation, and accountability.

In practice, the GAO report suggests that the system is not working as intended.

The scale of abuse inside federal prisons

The numbers alone are striking. From 2014 through 2022, there were approximately 8,500 reported allegations of sexual abuse in federal prisons. These cases involve both incarcerated individuals and staff, with roughly equal numbers of allegations attributed to each group.

The trend line is not encouraging. Annual allegations increased over time, reaching more than 1,100 in 2022.

But what happens after an allegation is made is just as important as the number itself. In the overwhelming majority of cases, investigations do not reach a definitive conclusion. About four out of five allegations are classified as unsubstantiated, meaning there is not enough evidence to determine whether the abuse occurred.

That statistic does not necessarily mean the allegations are false. It reflects the reality of investigating crimes in environments where evidence is often limited, delayed, or inaccessible. The result is a system where abuse can be reported, investigated, and still remain unresolved.

When compliance does not equal safety

Perhaps the most troubling finding in the GAO report is the disconnect between compliance and reality.

PREA audits are the backbone of federal oversight. Yet those audits are not designed to detect whether sexual abuse is actually happening inside a facility. Instead, they are designed to determine whether the facility has policies and procedures in place that meet PREA standards.

A prison can pass an audit while abuse is ongoing. And according to the GAO, that is exactly what has happened.

Facilities such as FCI Dublin and FCC Coleman were found to be fully compliant with PREA standards even as widespread sexual abuse was later uncovered. In some cases, employees were convicted of abuse that occurred during the same period when audits reported full compliance.

The audits were doing what they were designed to do. The problem is that what they were designed to do may not be enough.

The report also points to structural issues in how audits are conducted. Time constraints can limit how thoroughly auditors evaluate facilities. Contracting arrangements may create incentives that do not align with rigorous oversight. And auditors have reported difficulty accessing the documents they need to verify compliance. Taken together, these issues raise a fundamental question: is the system measuring what matters?

Barriers to reporting abuse

Even the best oversight system depends on people coming forward. Inside federal prisons, that remains a major challenge.

The GAO’s interviews with incarcerated individuals paint a consistent picture. Most believe people are hesitant to report This assexual abuse, and many say they would think twice before reporting it themselves.

Fear of retaliation is a central concern. Individuals worry about being targeted by other incarcerated people or facing consequences from staff. Some described scenarios where reporting abuse could lead to increased scrutiny, disciplinary action, or placement in more restrictive housing.

There are also gaps in knowledge. Many individuals are not aware of all the ways they can report abuse, including options that involve outside organizations or third parties.

And then there is the issue of privacy. In a prison environment, where daily life is closely monitored and interactions are rarely confidential, it can be difficult to report something as sensitive as sexual abuse without others finding out.

These factors create a powerful disincentive to report, which means the official numbers likely understate the true scope of the problem. This was highlighted in a Federal Probation journal article noting, “… without exception, scholars, advocates, and inmates believe prison rape is grossly underreported.”

Why investigations fall short

When allegations are reported, investigators face their own set of challenges.

Physical evidence is often limited. Many incidents are reported days, weeks, or even months after they occur. By that point, critical evidence may no longer exist.

Surveillance systems can help, but they are far from perfect. Cameras do not cover every area, and even where they exist, footage may not be retained long enough to be useful. Staffing shortages add another layer of difficulty. Investigations involving staff can take years to resolve, leaving victims without closure and accused employees in limbo.

At the same time, officials acknowledge that false allegations do occur. While those cases are relatively rare, they complicate the investigative process and can consume resources that are already stretched thin.

Missed opportunities for reform

The GAO report also highlights areas where the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) could be doing more with the tools it already has.

The agency collects extensive data on sexual abuse allegations, but it does not routinely analyze that data for long-term trends. Without that analysis, it is harder to identify patterns or intervene early at facilities that may be developing problems.

There are also gaps in transparency. Public reports provide detailed information about abuse involving incarcerated individuals, but far less detail about cases involving staff, even though those cases can have profound implications.

And while the BOP has conducted cultural assessments at women’s facilities, those reviews have not been extended to men’s prisons, which house the vast majority of the federal prison population.

A framework that has not kept pace

One of the most important conclusions in the report is that the PREA standards themselves may need to be updated. The standards were finalized in 2012. Since then, there have been significant advances in technology, changes in correctional practices, and new insights into how abuse occurs and how it can be prevented.

Yet the standards have not been comprehensively revised to reflect those changes. The GAO recommends a formal review of the standards, which could open the door to stronger requirements, better use of technology, and more effective oversight mechanisms.

A moment of agreement and a test of follow-through

What makes this report particularly notable is that the agencies involved are not pushing back.

The Department of Justice and the BOP agreed with the GAO’s findings and recommendations, acknowledging the need for improvements across the system.

The report itself puts the issue in stark terms, noting that sexual abuse in federal prisons “undermines the safety” of more than 140,000 individuals in custody and conflicts with the Bureau’s fundamental responsibility to protect those in its care.

That acknowledgment creates an important opportunity. It is not often that oversight bodies and the agencies they review align so clearly on both the problems and the path forward.

The real test will be whether the recommended changes are implemented, whether audits become more meaningful, whether data is used more effectively, and whether the standards themselves are strengthened.

PREA was born out of a recognition that sexual abuse in prisons is unacceptable. Two decades later, that principle still holds.

The question now is whether the system built to enforce it can finally deliver on its promise.