In the early hours of an April morning in 2002, Wendy (not her real name) was raped by a U.S. serviceman inside her van at a parking lot in Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture. After an insufficient response from the Japanese police, realizing there was no 24-hour rape crisis center in Japan and seeing that both Japanese prosecutors and the U.S. Navy had decided not to pursue charges against the suspect, she became determined to stand up and seek change so that future victims would not have to go through what she did. In a civil lawsuit she filed to seek damages from the perpetrator, who was a crew member of the U.S. Navy's aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk, the Tokyo District Court recognized in November 2004 that the defendant raped her and ordered him to pay her 3 million yen. But Wendy has no way of claiming the payment from the man, as he left Japan during the course of the trial, was released from the U.S. military and his whereabouts remains unknown. Her fight has been a difficult one, as her mostly single-handed efforts have often brought her up against a wall of bureaucracy in both Japan and the United States. Being an Australian citizen residing in Japan has also complicated things...more...