In such cases, the submarine rendezvous with a surface ship and the sailor is usually taken off by helicopter, said Lory Manning, director of the Women in the Military Project, a non-profit group that looks at policy and law on what women can do in the military.
“It’s not something that would be unique to a rape,” she said in a phone interview Thursday.
Crimes such as male-on-male rape already happen on submarines from time to time, said Manning, a retired Navy captain.
“In fact there are more male-on-male rapes in the military than male-on-female rapes,” she said.
By: Brant
2 comments:
OK. I wanna see the facts ( not the video) on this one.
Well if she was talking about the Navy, then she is most likely correct.
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