Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) Practice Test

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1 / 20

How should an incident be handled if reported by a third party or anonymously?

Ignore anonymous reports.

Document only if the party is known.

Take the report seriously, document it, initiate an investigation if warranted, and protect the reporter’s confidentiality to the extent possible.

Treat third-person or anonymous reports as legitimate information that deserves careful handling. When such a report comes in, immediately document what is known—who is involved (if identifiable), what happened, when and where it occurred, any alleged misconduct, and any immediate safety concerns. Even if the reporter isn’t known, recording the details creates a traceable record and helps determine the next steps. Assess whether the incident meets the agency’s criteria for a formal investigation and, if so, initiate one. Protect the reporter’s confidentiality to the extent possible, sharing information only as the policy and safety needs require, to minimize risk of retaliation and to maintain trust in the reporting system. If there’s any immediate danger, take appropriate safety actions and involve the right authorities per policy. This approach ensures potential abuse is not ignored, supports thorough inquiry, and upholds the commitment to protect those who report, regardless of how the report was made.

Choosing to ignore anonymous reports or to rely only on information from identified individuals misses potential harm and undermines PREA protections, while publicly revealing a reporter’s identity to speed action violates confidentiality and can expose them to retaliation.

Publicly disclose the reporter's identity to expedite action.

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