Progress Under the Prison Rape Elimination Act
Congress passed the Prison Rape Elimination Act in response to the high prevalence of sexual abuse in prisons, with estimates suggesting that at least 13 percent of incarcerated people had experienced sexual abuse. Congress also identified several compounding safety challenges in correctional facilities: limited incident reporting and data, inadequate training for staff, and lasting effects of victimization, including trauma and violence during and after incarceration.
As required by the law, the DOJ established comprehensive standards in 2012 for preventing, detecting, and responding to sexual abuse and harassment across different types of confinement facilities. These include all state and federal prisons, local jails, juvenile facilities, and community confinement. The federal standards outline protocols for investigations, establish reporting mechanisms, institute accountability measures for staff misconduct, and improve access to victim services and treatment. Together, these practices aim to more effectively protect the human rights of incarcerated people.
The DOJ also established the National PREA Resource Center as a hub for resources, training, and technical assistance to support correctional agencies’ compliance with the standards. Among other responsibilities, the center developed comprehensive staff training and guidelines to strengthen reporting practices, prevent retaliation, improve security, and connect facilities to external victim services organizations. Additionally, the center offered training and technical assistance to facilities preparing for mandatory periodic audits intended to ensure compliance with federal standards.
The Prison Rape Elimination Act has brought many benefits. Starting in 2004, national data reporting on sexual violence in custody has helped quantify the scale of abuse. Systemic changes to safety practices and increased partnerships with victim services groups have helped improve conditions for incarcerated people and corrections staff. Implementing the law has also reinforced wider efforts to improve prison conditions, as audits and corrective action plans target staff assignments, training and supervision, facility design, and ways to expand treatment and resources for incarcerated people.
In 2025, 25 states and the District of Columbia certified that they were in full compliance with the Prison Rape Elimination Act, and 22 states submitted assurances, meaning that they were working toward full compliance. That is meaningful progress compared to 2015, when only 10 states were in full compliance. Experts from Just Detention International, an organization that works to end sexual abuse in detention, assert that corrections officials show a strong demand for resources to implement the law, reflecting broad recognition of its value.
Still, more work is needed to continue implementing federal standards against sexual abuse in detention and strengthen accountability mechanisms. In 2020, more than 36,000 sexual victimization allegations were filed, with 2,351 substantiated reports in federal and state prisons. A recent report found that the federal Bureau of Prisons failed to implement the Prison Rape Elimination Act and documented high rates of sexual violence in federal women’s facilities and poor corrections responses that enabled ongoing abuse. These estimates understate the true scope of sexual violence in prisons. Many cases go unreported due to limited agency transparency, weak internal procedures, and insufficient staff buy-in and intervention. Overreliance on incarcerated victims reporting incidents and their fear of staff retaliation also contribute to underreporting.
Though there have been steps in the right direction over the past two decades, sexual violence in custody remains an entrenched problem that requires robust federal oversight as well as expanded resources for effective implementation and compliance. As state and local budgets often lack capacity and resources to address sexual violence on their own, federal funding has been essential to equipping corrections agencies with universal tools that promote sexual safety and offering facilities technical assistance to tailor implementation of the Prison Rape Elimination Act.