The Texas Observer

The Namesake

That’s why these issues have to be resolved; you have to give people their lives back.

AVINIA MASTERS WAS 13 YEARS OLD WHEN A STRANGER raped her at knifepoint in her Dallas bedroom. For more than two decades, her rape kit—the evidence collected in a hospital after the assault on July 31, 1985—sat untested. By the time her case was reopened in 2005, it was too late to press charges. Masters learned hers was one of hundreds of thousands of kits across the country that sat on shelves for years, sometimes—as in Masters’ case—as assailants went on to rape others. For more than 10 years, she’s advocated for reform in Texas, where a backlog of about 20,000 untested rape kits was identified in 2011. This year, Masters worked with Democratic state Representative about the decades of trauma and work that led to the Lavinia Masters Act and what comes next.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Texas Observer

The Texas Observer5 min read
Ghosts From Texas’ Past
Initially, the inside of the historic building on Cedar Street in Austin’s expensive Hyde Park neighborhood seems ordinary: Fluorescent lights line a narrow, carpeted hallway off of which branch offices, most just big enough for a desk and a few shel
The Texas Observer6 min read
Dark History
My great-grandfather, José-María Arana, was a racist. After the United States barred Chinese men from immigrating under the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, tens of thousands sought a new life in Mexico, where they faced no warmer a welcome as they est
The Texas Observer4 min readCrime & Violence
Can Texas Solve A Problem Like Ken Paxton?
The forthcoming impeachment trial of Attorney General Ken Paxton is guaranteed to provide a colorful show and a lesson on how Texans occasionally confront the corrupt through a highly anachronistic political tool. Many Americans may only recall the i

Related Books & Audiobooks