27 See Frazier & Haney, supra note 21, at 611; see also Morabito, supra note 9, at 11; Megan Alderden & Sarah Ullman, Creating a More Complete and Current Picture: Examining Police and Prosecutor Decision-Making When Processing Sexual Assault Cases, 18(5) Violence Against Women 525, 541 (2012); Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1.
28 See Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1.
29 See Morabito, supra note 9, at 4; see also Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1.
30 See Id.
31 See Morabito, supra note 9, at 12; see also Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1; Regina Schuller & Anna Stewart, Police responses to sexual assault complaints; the role of perpetrator/complainant intoxication, 24(5) Law Hum. Behav. 535-51 (2000).
32 See Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1; see also Jan Jordan, Beyond Belief? Police, Rape, and Women’s Credibility, 4(1) Criminology & Crim. Justice 29, 39 (2004).
33 See Sexual Violence Justice Institute, Research Finds Most Sexual Assault Myths to be True: Uncovering Myths and Practices, Influencing Change (2016).
34 See Lisa Frohmann, Discrediting Victims’ Allegations of Sexual Assault: Prosecutorial Accounts of Case Rejections, 38(2) Social Problems 213, 218 (May 1991).
35 See Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1.
36 See Jordan, supra note 32, at 39.
37 See, e.g., Christine Rotenberg, Police-reported sexual assaults in Canada, 2009 to 2014: A statistical profile (Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics, 2017).
38 See End the Backlog, Statute of Limitations, available at http://www.endthebacklog.org/information-survivors-survivors-rights-locating-rape-kit/statute-limitations.
39 See Morabito, supra note 9, at 8; see also Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1; Alderden & Ullman, supra note 27, at 544.
40 See Morabito, supra note 9, at 12.
41 See id; see also Erbe, supra note 9, at 616-17.
42 See Chen Shen, Study: From Attribution and Thought-Process Theory to Rape Shield Laws: The Meanings of Victim’s Appearance in Rape Trials, 5 J.L. & Fam. Stud. 435, 437 (2003).
43 See Lisa Goodman, Katya Fels, and Catherine Glenn. No Safe Place: Sexual Assault in the Lives of Homeless Women (ViolenceAgainstWomen.net, 2006).
44 See Frazier & Haney, supra note 21, at 622.
45 See Alderden & Ullmann, supra note 27, at 544; see also Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1.
46 See Morabito, supra note 9, at 4; see also Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1.
47 See Frazier & Haney, supra note 21, at 624; see also Morabito, supra note 10, at 11.
48 See Morabito, supra note 9, at 15; see also Morabito, Williams and Pattavina, supra note 1.
49 See Frazier & Haney, supra note 21, at 624.
50 See id. at 625.
51 See Morabito, supra note 9, at 11; see also Morabito, Williams, and Pattavina, supra note 1.
52 See Alderden & Ullman, supra note 27, at 542.
53 See Lisa Frohmann, Convictability and Discordant Locales: Reproducing Race, Class, and Gender Ideologies in Prosecutorial Decisionmaking. 31(3) LAW & SOCIETY REV. 531-555 (1997). In a 2014 study by Cassia Spohn and Katherine Tellis, the authors found that detectives would sometimes present cases to the prosecutor prior to making an arrest for a pre-arrest filing decision. CASSIA SPOHN & KATHERINE TELLIS, POLICING AND PROSECUTING SEXUAL ASSAULT: INSIDE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM (Lynn Reinner Publishers, 2014).