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Stanford student gets six months for rape

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  • Mommy's Little Rapist is in a Textbook

    The textbook, Introduction to Criminal Justice: Systems, Diversity, and Change 2nd Edition, has Brock Turner's mug shot beside the example of the word "Rape." Authors Callie Marie Rennison and Mary J. Dodge decided that the US shouldn't forget what he did.

    Originally posted by Introduction to Criminal Justice: Systems, Diversity, and Change 2nd Edition
    A recent highly publicized example is that of rapist Brock Turner. Turner, a student at Stanford University, was caught in the act, and ultimately convicted of three felony charges: assault with intent to rape an intoxicated woman, sexually penetrating an intoxicated person with a foreign object, and sexually penetrating an unconscious person with a foreign object. Turner’s victim was unconscious during the attack, as it happened behind a trash container outside of the Kappa Alpha fraternity house on campus.
    It looks like Mommy's Little Rapist is now a literal textbook definition of the word "rapist." It couldn't happen to a nicer guy.
    Corey Taylor is correct. Man is a "four letter word."

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    • It appears that the judge in the Brock Turner's rape case is now subject to a recall.
      Corey Taylor is correct. Man is a "four letter word."

      Comment


      • I wouldn't say he's subject to it. There's just a petition asking for it to happen.

        And given how this country doesn't seem to give a crap about it's treatment of rape/harassment/assault victims, I have my doubts about a recall happening.
        Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers

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        • It looks like someone can't leave well enough alone. Brock Turner is appealing his sexual assault conviction and asking for a new trial. If his appeal succeeds, he might actually be sent to a real prison if he gets convicted again.
          Corey Taylor is correct. Man is a "four letter word."

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          • I thought you couldn't get convicted twice for the same crime?

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            • Originally posted by Tama View Post
              I thought you couldn't get convicted twice for the same crime?
              You can't. This is different, as he's trying to get his current conviction overturned by claiming it's a mistrial. Mistrials are stricken from the record and it's basically a redo of the same trial.

              Mistrials are only given if something happened during the trial that may have caused the jury to make a verdict under incorrect circumstances:

              - A juror is biased (e.g. was found to be familiar with the case outside of testimony in the courtroom, or had some kind of bias that may have caused them to enter a verdict in bad faith)

              - The prosecutor or defendant entered invalid evidence

              - Testimony was found to be made via coercion or bribery (e.g. the prosecutor or defendant illegally coaxed a witness to say a certain thing)

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              • 1) on appeal, the original trial is vacated- basically, the court says "the defendant is entitled to a fair trial, and the previous trial wasn't a fair trial. Try again"
                2) Double Jeopardy is meant as protection against the prosecution simply charging someone multiple times for the same offence. (obviously if someone breaks more than one law, you can prosecute them on multiple charges simultaneously, while if someone murders two people at different times, you can prosecute them for the subsequent murder separately (they just don't usually bother if they can prosecute simultaneously. And yes, if you are convicted of murdering someone but they aren't actually dead, then if you murder them later you can be prosecuted for the second murder, even if it would raise a couple of eyebrows.) In this case, it's the defendant asking for a new trial, so Double Jeopardy isn't the issue. it's more that the defendant needs to prove the new trial wouldn't simply be a rehash of the old one.

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                • This latest story reminds me of the kidnapper in Oklahoma who was sentenced to 65 years in prison. He appealed his case and won. The prosecutor in his first case told the jury that they didn't need to worry because the kidnapper would out early on parole, which wasn't true. So, he was granted a new trial with a new judge, a new prosecutor, and a new jury.

                  The new jury sentenced him to 90 years.
                  Corey Taylor is correct. Man is a "four letter word."

                  Comment


                  • actually, I don't find that particularly amusing.
                    1) his appeal was perfectly reasonable, and I dislike cases where a reasonable appellant is disadvantaged due to appealing
                    2) that seems a long sentence for kidnapping when murder carries a 25 year tariff. (what that means is that you must serve at least 25 years before you are eligible for parole except under special circumstances (usually humanitarian reasons)) so the kidnappper probably has a case that the punishment is excessive. For just kidnapping- not kidnap/murder or similar- I'd have thought 10-15 years would be more appropriate, 20 years at the outside.

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                    • Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post
                      actually, I don't find that particularly amusing.
                      1) his appeal was perfectly reasonable, and I dislike cases where a reasonable appellant is disadvantaged due to appealingf
                      I'd think that's not generally true. Otherwise, if in the Stanford case it was found that there was indeed some kind of heinous mistake by the prosecution that grants the defendant the appeal, you would think it's unfair if the subsequent trial gave him a harsher sentence.

                      Originally posted by s_stabeler
                      2) that seems a long sentence for kidnapping when murder carries a 25 year tariff. (what that means is that you must serve at least 25 years before you are eligible for parole except under special circumstances (usually humanitarian reasons)) so the kidnappper probably has a case that the punishment is excessive. For just kidnapping- not kidnap/murder or similar- I'd have thought 10-15 years would be more appropriate, 20 years at the outside.
                      Something tells me this is not just an innocent kidnapping case. Often times kidnappings are almost a thinly veiled euphemism for sadistic acts by the criminal in question. I mean, I've heard people refer to Elizabeth Smart as a "kidnapping" case but obviously her kidnapper did a lot more harm than just that, and deserved a life sentence for his actions.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Greenday View Post
                        I wouldn't say he's subject to it. There's just a petition asking for it to happen.

                        And given how this country doesn't seem to give a crap about it's treatment of rape/harassment/assault victims, I have my doubts about a recall happening.
                        It looks like the petition is successful. The people can make this judge lose his bench.
                        Corey Taylor is correct. Man is a "four letter word."

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by TheHuckster View Post
                          I'd think that's not generally true. Otherwise, if in the Stanford case it was found that there was indeed some kind of heinous mistake by the prosecution that grants the defendant the appeal, you would think it's unfair if the subsequent trial gave him a harsher sentence.
                          It doesn't have to be a henious mistake- not least because there's no such thing, since henious implies it was deliberate- but yes, when an appeal isn't merely an attempt to get away lightly, I disfavour increasing the sentence, on the grounds that it would discourage people from making legitimate appeals. If it's merely appealing for a lighter sentence for no good reason, then sure, increase the sentence.

                          Basically, I see it as equivalent to the custom you occasionally see of increasing the punishment for a kid who appeals a punishment a teacher imposed on them to the Principal (or whoever can overrule the teacher) for no good reason- however, if the kid had a good reason for the appeal (say if there was an actual question about if the teacher was even allowed to impose the punishment they did)
                          then the principal would merely confirm the existing punishment at worst.

                          Originally posted by TheHuckster View Post
                          Something tells me this is not just an innocent kidnapping case. Often times kidnappings are almost a thinly veiled euphemism for sadistic acts by the criminal in question. I mean, I've heard people refer to Elizabeth Smart as a "kidnapping" case but obviously her kidnapper did a lot more harm than just that, and deserved a life sentence for his actions.
                          That may be true, but that's why I compared the sentence to the minimum time you have to spend in prison for murder. it is kinda harsh when a kidnapper spends nearly 4 times longer behind bars than he would have if he had outright killed his victim.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post
                            It doesn't have to be a henious mistake- not least because there's no such thing, since henious implies it was deliberate
                            Ok, let me reword it: A serious flaw in the prosecution, either caused by a stupid technicality or deliberately misleading the jury.

                            Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post
                            but yes, when an appeal isn't merely an attempt to get away lightly, I disfavour increasing the sentence, on the grounds that it would discourage people from making legitimate appeals. If it's merely appealing for a lighter sentence for no good reason, then sure, increase the sentence.
                            It's a brand new trial, though. There's no way to prevent something like this from happening because, by definition, nothing in the prior trial can be considered. The judge has to hear the testimony and evidence as if it's a trial that's never been heard before, and if the judge believes, based on this, the sentence should be X, the fact that it was Y before shouldn't have any bearing.

                            Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post
                            That may be true, but that's why I compared the sentence to the minimum time you have to spend in prison for murder. it is kinda harsh when a kidnapper spends nearly 4 times longer behind bars than he would have if he had outright killed his victim.
                            Minimum sentence does not mean everyone just gets 25 years. It's a minimum. A good portion of first degree murders are a life sentence, and it's based on the circumstances behind the crime. An abused wife who shoots her husband to death premeditated is likely going to get 25 versus someone who kidnaps and tortures to death a child. I guarantee you if Elizabeth Smart were killed, her kidnapper wouldn't get 25 years.

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                            • You're not entirely wrong, I'm just saying it's weird that the sentence increased instead of decreasing like you'd expect.

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                              • Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post
                                You're not entirely wrong, I'm just saying it's weird that the sentence increased instead of decreasing like you'd expect.
                                I can't agree or disagree because I can't find the case catcul was referring to, so I don't know the specifics of it.

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