Sunday, December 04, 2005

Why it matters


This is a story about your daughter. Your sister. Your dearest friend.

And about why what happens in government is so terribly important: for the people you know who shrug off civic involvement as boring or irrelevent, take this story and staple it to their forehead. "The government" are mostly the people who decide how much poison is allowed to go into your kid's drinking water and how much feces is allowed in your hot dog.

"The government" are the commissioners who decide where you can park, and if you have public transportation. I

"The government" are the five men and women who decide if your school will teach science or superstition.

And "the government" is judges.

I'm posting it up here without embroidery because Shakespeare's Sister called it to my attention, because it made me furious and because it speaks for itself:

Saturday, December 03, 2005
Don’t Just Blame the Victim; Prosecute Her
A 17-year-old girl went to police at the urging of her friends after she was allegedly gang-raped by three men, including her boyfriend. The men testified that the act was consensual. After reviewing all the information and statements, prosecutors decided they didn’t think they could prove a rape allegation, and so declined to prosecute the case.

Instead, they prosecuted the victim for filing a false police report. Yesterday, she was found guilty.

The victim has never recanted her story. Instead, the decision was based on the judge’s opinion that the three men were more credible, in part because a police detective and the victim’s friends testified she did not “act traumatized” in the days after the incident.

In cases like this, people tend to draw their own conclusions, based on what’s reported, filling in the blanks in a way that satisfies one’s judgment. What are you thinking right now? That maybe it really was a false rape charge? That maybe the victim was just vindictive? That there had to be some reason that the judge found her guilty?

Let me give you some more information—something that is only a possibility because The American Street’s Kevin Hayden has known the victim nearly her whole life. He attended the trial. He noticed that the prosecutor repeatedly referred to the attackers as “boys,” even though they were grown men and the victim was 17. He noticed that the judge acknowledged he had found inconsistencies in all of their stories, but, inexplicably, decided that the same reasonable doubt that kept prosecutors from pursuing charges against the attackers wasn’t enough to keep him from finding the victim guilty.

He also noted what was, and was not, allowed to be introduced as evidence. Allowed: The 17-year-old victim’s sexual history. Not allowed: That one of the victim’s “friends,” her mother, has problems with alcohol and prescription drugs, provided her daughter with the alcohol she’d had that evening (which the mother had stolen from the store at which she cashiers), and was:
…awaiting her boyfriend’s return to her home within two months of the rape. That boyfriend was in prison for molesting his own daughter. That’s hardly a credible witness with any sympathy for victims of sexual assault…

Additionally, the two ‘friends’ were the ones who convinced the 17 year old that she should report it to the police. So if the young woman is guilty [of filing a false rape charge], the instigating accessories to her ‘crime’ are considered credible experts about how a rape victim should act.


Again: The judge decided that the victim was not credible because her friend and her mother said she did not “act traumatized” in the days after the incident. He then filed a charge against the victim which turned the two people he had deemed credible witnesses into criminal conspirators. That seems rather confusing, that two criminal conspirators could also be credible witnesses, and experts on post-rape trauma no less. Although, it is rather convenient for a judge and prosecutors who might want to make a point.
Even though the woman never said she lied or recanted her story, city prosecutors say they took the unusual step of filing charges against her because of the seriousness of her accusations.

[…]

Ted Naemura, the assistant city attorney who prosecuted the case, said the woman's false accusations were serious enough to lead to charges. The young men faced prison sentences of at least 7 years and a lifetime labeled as sex offenders. In addition, police spent considerable resources investigating the accusations.

Beaverton has no policy about prosecuting such cases, but reviews each one on its merits, Naemura said. The city prosecuted a similar case a year ago in which a judge ordered the woman to pay $1,100 in restitution for the city's investigation costs, said Officer Paul Wandell, a Beaverton Police Department spokesman.

The bottom line, Naemura said, is that people can't use the criminal justice system to further their own ends.

This case should not deter legitimate victims from reporting crimes, he said.

It shouldn’t, should it? Something tells me it just might, particularly when a judge admits he found inconsistencies in the stories of both the woman and her attackers, but decided nonetheless that the attackers were “legitimate” victims and the woman was not. As it is, only 10% of victims of sex crimes in Oregon file reports with police.

Kevin Neely, spokesman for the Oregon Attorney General's Office, said it was rare for alleged sex crime victims to be charged much less convicted of filing a false police report.

"Our concern is always with the underreporting of sexual assaults," he said, "not with false reporting. It's a safe bet that prosecutions for false reporting are rare."

Just how safe a bet? Heather J. Huhtanen, Sexual Assault Training Institute director for the Attorney General's Sexual Assault Task Force, reports that Portland police have found that 1.6% of sexual assault cases were falsely reported. By way of comparison, 2.6% of auto theft cases were falsely reported.

Here are some things we hear a lot: Vindictive women use rape charges to get back at men. Women’s sexual histories can be informative in a rape case. Women who were “really raped” are easily identified by the way they behave.

None of them are true.

Yes, there are some women (and men) who file false rape charges. They are, however, rare, usually quickly identified as false, and are almost always thrown out long before trial. In truth, many genuine victims of rape never see their cases reach trial due to lack of evidence; a genuine rape victim is exponentially less likely to see her attacker prosecuted than an erroneously charged man is to be prosecuted.

A woman’s sexual history has absolutely no bearing on whether she was raped—including her past sexual history, if any, with her attacker. A rapist doesn’t give a rat’s ass whether he rapes a virgin or a whore, or any of the majority of us who fall somewhere in between, which makes each of us as likely to fall victim to the crime as anyone else.

There is no such thing as a “typical” response to rape. Immediately following a rape, some women go into shock. Some are lucid. Some are angry. Some are ashamed. Some are practical. Some are irrational. Some want to report it. Some don’t. Most have a combination of emotions, but there is no standard response. Responses to rape are as varied as its victims. In the long term, some rape victims act out. Some crawl inside themselves. Some have healthy sex lives. Some never will again.

Now here are some things that are true. Rape is underreported. Reporting a rape is difficult, and can be embarrassing, shameful, hurtful, frustrating, and too often unfulfilling. Quite bluntly, there is very little incentive to report a rape. It’s a terrible experience, and the likelihood of seeing justice served is a long shot. Even if it is, it usually comes at great personal cost, with one’s sexual history put on public display amidst the dismay of reliving the attack—and an extended trial can necessitate living in a state of suspended animation, where moving on from that moment is all but impossible. The only real incentive one has is knowing the sacrifice might prevent the same thing from happening to someone else. Not a small thing, but a big personal investment.

And now, women have one less reason to come forward—the possible horror of watching their attackers go free while they are found guilty.

(Many thanks to Dave Johnson of Seeing the Forest for giving me the heads-up on this story.)

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

Jefferson said he trembled for his country when he reflected that God is just. Any of us men could say the same thing about our gender.

Anonymous said...

I had a friend tell me about how she was almost raped on her birthday because she accepted a drink laced with GHB from a guy who said he was friends with her bf. Luckily she stumbled into a cab before she was competely paralyzed.

She still feels extremely guilty about accepting the drink from a stranger, and hasn't told her bf about the incident.

I don't know why she told me. It still bothers me a lot to think about how this beautiful, intelligent woman's life could have been destroyed by some putrid piece of trash, looking to get some ass.

Anonymous said...

Calpundit is on this. You might have a look at the thread. Kevin Drum at Washington Monthly.

Anonymous said...

It's purely anecdotal, but I've represented 3 men who were accused of sexual assault in the past 4 months. In one case, the alleged victim recanted, admitting that she engaged in sex voluntarily, but made up the assault story when her husband learned that she had gone to a motel with two guys. In the other, the "victim" made up the story to cover spending the night with her boyfriend. It seems my client's wife was in the house all the time, unbeknownst to the "victim." When confronted with the fact that there was a third party in position to know what had (or hadn't) happened, she folded like a card table.

All in a county of 35,000 people. A few false allegations should never operate to invalidate the vast majority of legitimate claims, but neither should the presumption of innocence be cast aside on the basis of statistics.

The incident you describe is egregious, and in the absence of a reliable recantation, should have proceeded to trial, where cross examination (the greatest engine yet devised for the determination of truth) would have allowed a jury to determine the facts.

An Angry Old Broad said...

So,when confronted with,let's just say "a sexual opportunity",men are only expected to say yes? For as long as people have been fucking,you'd think we'd have learned by now that some situations are by nature going to be complex,as in the case of sexual encounters that are truly consensual(this case aside for half a second)involving more than two people.Hell,the two person variety is complicated enough as it is.In this case we have three healthy(in body at least)young males,and one 17 yr old girl,that's a serious physical power imbalance,the math on that isn't too tough to grasp.Nothing in these men seemed to have kicked in as far as feeling any sort of concern for her overall well being,that's what bothers me.Yeah,I know that's not actually"criminal",but damn it,it really breaks my heart that a hell of alot of men seem to just not give a flying damn.I think this is one area where we grown up people have royally failed the younger people in our care who are now trying to find their way as young adults.

Now,out of those 3 men(though the judge appearently thought of them as"boys",though all were of legal age)not a one of them had a moment's pause?Not having that pause isn't always a crime,to be sure,but it does speak to the overall attitude at work that makes rape ok in this country in far too many contexts.

I've been reading the various writings on this case in the lefty world o'blogs,and I'm having trouble with this,writing about my own experiences with rape,sexual assault,and the whole sex/violence entanglement our culture embraces and how that's effected my world,my life,my experiences,but I'm scared to put it out there.Even my husband doesn't know all of it,though I have told him quite a bit.

Decades have passed and I'm still scared sometimes.If I blog all this,I just know some asshole MRA is going to run his mouth and I simply don't think I have the fucking strength anymore to kick his ass.We haven't progressed one god damned bit as far as rape is concerned in this country in all the 45 yrs I've been alive.Breaks my heart it does,really.

I wish more men understood the emotional componants of sex and how important and sometimes fragile and life altering that is for BOTH genders.I'm determined to teach my son this as he quickly enters adolescence.I really do want him to care about what he does with his penis,how that effects him and the people he will choose to have sex with.And do that without warping the poor kid,lol.

I hate the feelings this case brings out in me.Right now things are too chaotic in my head to sort it out so I don't sound fucking pathetic or batshit nuts.

Anonymous said...

I feel a comment in me, but it's not really coherently thought out, but just to show that I'm listening..

I've known too many female friends over the years who at some point or another felt comfortable enough to talk about their violent experiences with men. I believe whole heartedly that most assaults go unreported. Many had a 'Shrug it off' attitude, that they didn't want it to become who they were, or let others know it had really hurt them. In my early twenties I had a girlfriend who suffered some kind of PTSD from a violent assault upon her that happened when she was a teen. From her I learned alot about the difference between 'victim' and 'survivor', and to be more respectful and aware of the socially dominant role we menfolk are carte blanche handed from the moment our Y chromosome sprouts us one of them thar penis things. I'm no SNAG tho, (sensitive new age guy) - I love to oggle a woman's curves like I like good art, erotica or drink. Testosterone is a blessing and a curse.

Nowadays I focus on being good to the women who matter most to me. I have a wife, a sister, a mom, and two little nieces I adore - all of whom could kick my ass if they so desired. Not necessarily physically, but intellectually, spiritually, or with the sheer veracity of childhood energy.

And if I ever have my own family, well..
I'd teach a son to be respectful of women as best I could, but if I ever have a daughter(s) she or they'll be getting kick boxing lessons for sure - ballet will be optional.

driftglass said...

Ivory Billed Woodpecker,
I don't believe in collective punishment or karma but, yeah, I take your point.

the key,
It happens everywhere and it's nothing but sad.

opit,
Thanks. It's kind of a blog swarm. I'm just doing my small part.

An Angry Old Broad said...

Right now things are too chaotic in my head to sort it out so I don't sound fucking pathetic or batshit nuts.
You don't sound like either, so don't worry a bit.

mac,
dementia doesn't sell.
sex does.

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