MemphisSaysNOMORE.org


Memphis Says NO MORE partners with MEMPHO Music Festival 2018

Memphis Says NO MORE booth at MEMPHO Music Festival, 2018

This year, the Memphis Area Women’s Council and Memphis Says No More partnered with MEMPHO Music Festival at Shelby Farms to offer festival attendees a safe zone tent. Information and crisis intervention services were available at the tent both days of the festival, while others wearing Memphis Says No More shirts walked around the grounds. The Women’s Council and Memphis Says No More are excited about the opportunity to share awareness and help our community understand and prevent domestic and sexual violence.

Sisters Lia White and Shayla Purifoy, Shelby County Judicial Commissioner and Women’s Council board member, circulated among concert-goers, two of the many volunteers who shared Safe Zone and Memphis Says NO MORE information. See the Safe Zone tent behind them.

Memphis Says NO MORE images on main music stage


Memphis Says NO MORE bus ads unveiled downtown

MSNM_Bus

Members of the Memphis Sexual Assault Kit Task Force (SAKT) with a MATA bus bearing the Memphis Says NO MORE message. From left, Dewanna Lofton, SAKT coordinator; Maria Fuhrmann, special assistant to the city mayor; Deborah Clubb, MSNM coordinator and Executive Director of the Memphis Area Women’s Council; MPD Deputy Director Mike Ryall; TBI forensic scientist Donna Nelson; MPD Sgt. Ouita Knowlton; Anna Whalley, administrator, Rape Crisis Center; Hayley Price, MAWC intern; Asst. Dist. Atty. Eric Christensen


MSNM_MarcGasolThis local drive to build awareness and change attitudes and behavior about sexual assault and domestic violence is an offshoot of the national NO MORE communications campaign. The local campaign grew out of the work of the Memphis Sexual Assault Kit Task Force.

The task force was created in late 2013 to oversee testing of all untested rape and assault kits and to establish policies for prompt testing of new kits. The task force is made up of representatives of multiple state, county and city offices, as well as community advocates, including the Memphis Area Women’s Council.

The task force has raised $6 million, analyzed or shipped 5,986 kits to four labs, held public meetings to update the community, trained law enforcement on rape investigation, and has advocated for additional investigators and compassionate victim notification.

By mid-March of this year, 39 alledged rapists had been identified, including 20 believed to be multi-case offenders. MPD also had found 49 suspects were already convicted of the crime, 62 cases were past the statute of limitations and 33 victims had died. Most indictments are for Aggravated Rape, a Class A felony punishable by up to 30 years in prison.

The work continues, every day.  Learn more by visiting memphissaysnomore.org



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