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Stanford student gets six months for rape

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  • Greenday
    replied
    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.

    Leave a comment:


  • catcul
    replied
    It appears that the judge in the Brock Turner's rape case is now subject to a recall.

    Leave a comment:


  • catcul
    replied
    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.

    Leave a comment:


  • amandarthegreat
    replied
    So....I'm not going to claim to be best buds with the Turners or anything, but I do know a few people in their social circle (including the one who created the Fundraising page for Brock's 'little incident'). One of the main reasons that people were protesting outside of the Turner home is due to the location. The Turners had lived just two blocks away from the University of Dayton campus (so that line of bull about Brock not understanding college culture is completely false since he grew up in the thick of it) until right before the rape. Their current house a half mile from a high school. Dan (dad) and Carleen (mom) work 9-6 every day 20+ minutes away. In short, people in this neighborhood are not happy that Brock is there unsupervised from 8-7. I do not support the people that show up there with guns--that's abhorrent, especially considering that Greene County is the site of the John Crawford murder by cop.

    Leave a comment:


  • jackfaire
    replied
    Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
    And now he wants to tour college campuses so he can continue to blame everything but himself.
    Which I want him to do. We can have a counter speaker scheduled but a lot of people don't believe guys say the things that he says until they hear it themselves.

    Leave a comment:


  • s_stabeler
    replied
    except for, again, it is not a flaw in the system, or at least, the flaw isn't that defendants lie.

    The way the system is supposed to work:
    1. Prosecutor presents their case
    2. defendant attempts to poke holes in prosecutor's case

    It is not the job of the defense to allow the prosecutor to get away with an error in their case.

    In sentencing:
    1. the prosecutor- in arguing for a harsh punishment- makes their case for a harsh punishment
    2. The defendant argues for as low a punishment as they can get.

    The defendant probably will come up with bullshit during sentencing. It is the job of the prosecutor and judge to cut through the defendant's bullshit, not the job of the defense not to bring it up. The entire idea of the judicial system is that it's the prosecutor that has to prove the defense is being dishonest, because the principle is that you give the benefit of the doubt to the defendant ( " I would rather let 210 guilty men go free than see one innocent man condemned")

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  • Gravekeeper
    replied
    Originally posted by mjr View Post
    True. But as I said, the "court of public opinion" that is protesting him are doing so because they believe that his punishment wasn't severe enough. Many people think his punishment wasn't severe enough, and of course they are very upset by that. But again, court of public opinion being what it is...
    People were pissed over conduct during the trial just as much if not more than the ultimate sentence. This isn't a single issue problem. I'd be willing to bet no one would be outside his house with guns if he had, at any point, demonstrated remorse or even accepted some level of responsibility for his actions. But he blamed everything and one except himself and painted himself as the victim.

    And now he wants to tour college campuses so he can continue to blame everything but himself.


    Originally posted by D_Yeti_Esquire View Post
    Exactly. The job of the defense is to figure out a way out of it whether they did it or not, period. If bullshit works, that is not the Defense's fault. That is either a jury problem, a judge problem, or prosecutor incompetence. That's not a fault with the defense or the perpetrator. It's engaging the adveserial judicial system exactly as its designed. It is not nor will it ever be the job of the defense to incriminate itself no matter how obvious their guilt and expecting that is the basis of a lot of unjust judicial systems.
    But now we're back to "don't hate the player, hate the game". If you exploit a flaw in a system you don't get to wave responsibility for choosing to use that exploit. Especially in terms of a justice system. That sort of behaviour is pretty much universally loathed by the general public when it comes to the justice system. Because it exposes where the justice system splits away from morality or ethics.

    And we're not taking about self incrimination.

    Leave a comment:


  • D_Yeti_Esquire
    replied
    I generally accept that it is the prosecutor's job to show up the defendant's bullshit for what it is. The public can be as pissed off as they like with how the defendant conducts his case.
    Exactly. The job of the defense is to figure out a way out of it whether they did it or not, period. If bullshit works, that is not the Defense's fault. That is either a jury problem, a judge problem, or prosecutor incompetence. That's not a fault with the defense or the perpetrator. It's engaging the adveserial judicial system exactly as its designed. It is not nor will it ever be the job of the defense to incriminate itself no matter how obvious their guilt and expecting that is the basis of a lot of unjust judicial systems.

    That wades into some pretty nebulous territory in terms of free speech and if there's one thing US law enforcement is awful at its utilizing laws that are open to interpretation. Because inevitably they get interpreted in such a way as to be favourable to people like Brock who are already privileged in society.
    Ultimately the debate was always meant to be had (hence competing constitutional rights) so you can have cases like this were the 1st Amendment (Free Speech) goes head to head with the 14th (Equal Protection) where if I'm going to call something intimidation and harrassment if it happens to a 14 year old girl in school, I don't get to not call it that when it happens to someone you hate like Brock. Ultimately the 14th was about universal civil rights and not about protecting assholes, but that's why the law exists: everyone is an asshole to someone else.

    The reason enforcement is tricky is that frankly I can't even count the number of issues caused by these competing rights and "some dude" (Trademark) making 50,000 USD as a cop obviously is not being paid to be a warrior-scholar. We're not paying enough for either job.

    So we absolutely should acknowledge that Court of Public opinion is Bullying. Really we don't like to admit it is if we like what it's trying to accomplish. If we agree with the goal of the group then we want to frame it positive terms and talk about how we are the righteous.
    As far as I'm concerned, probably one of the best and most bang on South Park episodes was called Butterballs and it lampoons the hell out of this concept by taking the "bullied" in Butters and basically shows him get used by everyone from his direct bully to everyone using the scenario for advantage in ways that are essentially bullying. I loved two things about it: one, Butters himself basically has to learn to reconcile his life in a world he isn't actually going to get help in. And two, it does a really funny progression with the (legal) bullying behavior up until Jesus finally shows up and bullies some guy.
    Last edited by D_Yeti_Esquire; 09-16-2016, 12:30 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • s_stabeler
    replied
    Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
    And I'm not saying that. What I'm objecting too is this idea that he should somehow be shielded from the legal social consequences of his behaviour simply by virtue of the fact he is an individual or that you're suppose to do whatever it takes to win in a court of law. Regardless of how deplorable.

    That wades into some pretty nebulous territory in terms of free speech and if there's one thing US law enforcement is awful at its utilizing laws that are open to interpretation. Because inevitably they get interpreted in such a way as to be favourable to people like Brock who are already privileged in society.

    There's already a legal line to cross for something to become harassment. I'm objecting to the suggestion that there should be another legal line before that to protect you from public opinion.
    and I don't disagree- though barring interfering with the evidence, I generally accept that it is the prosecutor's job to show up the defendant's bullshit for what it is. The public can be as pissed off as they like with how the defendant conducts his case. However, in my opinion, these "protests" step over the harassment line. To whit: you can think he is an asshole. You can avoid associating with him as much as possible. You cannot show up outside his house and demand he be castrated.

    Leave a comment:


  • jackfaire
    replied
    Originally posted by mjr View Post
    But if we, as a society, are supposed to be "anti-bully",
    Kind of speaks to the mindset behind Court of Public Opinion actually. If a person was bullied as a child, not picked on, but bullied routinely and systematically made to feel worthless and destroyed personally and socially there are usually two different segments of childhood and two different causes.

    In Elementary school if you're bullied it's almost never by the kid whose having a cruddy home life, comes from an impoverished home, or anything like that.

    Most bullies in Elementary school are typically the most popular kid in class everyone likes them and even adults seem to fall under their spell. They then bully the "loser" kid the kid who there is no seeming reason to hate. He doesn't go around kicking puppies, he isn't mean, he isn't smelly. But he does something different, he likes to read, he cares more about school, he dresses different. Whatever it is he isn't like the tribe.

    In a smaller school like this he doesn't have a great shot of meeting people who are different just like him but he will in junior high. So 1st through 5th grade the bully will pick on him beat on him and generally ostracize him from the group because the Elementary School Court of Public Opinion has decided "You are wrong and you need to get right" (sadly most kids elementary school don't take the time to explain how)

    It's later in middle school and high school when you get the socially unacceptable bully the kid whose been shit on his whole life and rather than find his own tribe now turns his ire on those weaker than himself sometimes this can even earn him a ticket into the "in Crowds" Typically not.

    Meanwhile the Bullies who kept the "loser" kid out are now in a much bigger pond and they jump to ignoring the kid. Memory is a fickle thing and by mid to late high school no one remembers this "Swell Kid" was ever a horrific bully that destroyed another child's life. It's hard to see because the damage is gradual.

    That's not the bullying our country has an issue with the Court of Public opinion is bullying absolutely. Targeted abuse psychological or physical intended to alter who the target is and what they do. Bullying to "help them fit in" It's in offices, military, churches, families.

    It's a type of bullying that's reframed as "Helping" The only place we have expressed an issue with it is online. Thank god for small favors.

    But we bullied a woman who said a shitty joke by getting her fired.

    We bullied a group of adults who aren't pedophiles by calling them pedophiles (This one Yahoo got rid of Adult Rooms for Adults who didn't want a bunch of teens in their chatrooms however a news report was released pointing out that some teens are preyed on in Teen Rooms by adults. The parents response was to bully Yahoo and it's Advertisers with the demand "Get rid of Adult Rooms so that our teens will be safe"

    So we absolutely should acknowledge that Court of Public opinion is Bullying. Really we don't like to admit it is if we like what it's trying to accomplish. If we agree with the goal of the group then we want to frame it positive terms and talk about how we are the righteous.

    So when it comes to taking part in the behavior you have to question am I cool with this method because I approve of the ends or do I not like the method and should find a different way?

    Leave a comment:


  • mjr
    replied
    Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
    His guilt or lack thereof aren't up for debate.
    True. But as I said, the "court of public opinion" that is protesting him are doing so because they believe that his punishment wasn't severe enough. Many people think his punishment wasn't severe enough, and of course they are very upset by that. But again, court of public opinion being what it is...

    Perhaps, but bullying isn't exactly illegal either.
    It isn't, no. Though you could probably theoretically argue it's some form of assault. But if we, as a society, are supposed to be "anti-bully", we're not being consistent, and saying it's OK to bully people we don't like, and bully people in certain situations. Just seems like there's inconsistency there, at least in this case.

    Leave a comment:


  • Gravekeeper
    replied
    Originally posted by mjr View Post
    The problem though, at least here in the States, is that the "court of public opinion" is often times judge, jury, and executioner at a level far beyond where they need to be (and sometimes far beyond the legal system). In the "court of public opinion" someone is almost always guilty, and the punishment almost never severe enough.
    Oh it can undoubtedly go horrible wrong especially if its *before* a trial ( Nancy Grace ). But this is after a trial and this is all a matter of court record now. His guilt or lack thereof aren't up for debate.


    Originally posted by mjr View Post
    And, in theory, couldn't this particular protest be considered a form of bullying?
    Perhaps, but bullying isn't exactly illegal either.


    Originally posted by s_stabeler View Post
    What you cannot do is dress up harassment- and I'm talking civil harassment here, not criminal, I used the term illegal as shorthand for "breaking the law defining harassment" not "breaking a criminal law" ( at most, they are guilty of breach of the peace)- as a protest, and then it is magically acceptable.
    And I'm not saying that. What I'm objecting too is this idea that he should somehow be shielded from the legal social consequences of his behaviour simply by virtue of the fact he is an individual or that you're suppose to do whatever it takes to win in a court of law. Regardless of how deplorable.

    That wades into some pretty nebulous territory in terms of free speech and if there's one thing US law enforcement is awful at its utilizing laws that are open to interpretation. Because inevitably they get interpreted in such a way as to be favourable to people like Brock who are already privileged in society.

    There's already a legal line to cross for something to become harrassment. I'm objecting to the suggestion that there should be another legal line before that to protect you from public opinion.

    Leave a comment:


  • s_stabeler
    replied
    I should make one thing completely clear- you can consider Turner to be the scum of the earth. You can even- though I disagree- think Turner is as bad as Hitler or Stalin. You can treat him as a social leper all you want. What you cannot do is dress up harassment- and I'm talking civil harassment here, not criminal, I used the term illegal as shorthand for "breaking the law defining harassment" not "breaking a criminal law" ( at most, they are guilty of breach of the peace)- as a protest, and then it is magically acceptable. It doesn't work that way,

    So sure, there will be social consequences for Turner, and I'm fine with that. Buit all but hounding someone out of their own home- particularly when it's (understandably) difficult for a convicted sex offender to find somewhere to live anyway- is going way too far.

    Leave a comment:


  • mjr
    replied
    Originally posted by Gravekeeper View Post
    We're almost at a sort of anything you say can and will be used against you in the court of law, but you should completely shielded from the court of public opinion.
    The problem though, at least here in the States, is that the "court of public opinion" is often times judge, jury, and executioner at a level far beyond where they need to be (and sometimes far beyond the legal system). In the "court of public opinion" someone is almost always guilty, and the punishment almost never severe enough.

    There's also a bit of a double standard. If we're ok with "publicly shaming" someone through protest, and the "court of public opinion", why aren't we OK with someone being "publicly shamed" with a sandwich board sign on a busy street corner for a couple of weekends (or whatever)? Wouldn't that provide similar effect?

    And, in theory, couldn't this particular protest be considered a form of bullying?

    I'm not sticking up for the guy. What he did was horrible. I'm just asking a few questions.

    Leave a comment:


  • Gravekeeper
    replied
    Originally posted by TheHuckster View Post
    I'm not going to feel too bad about their lives being a little distraught from people yelling at them from a distance and shaming them publicly for a little while before everyone forgets about this case.
    Indeed.

    Which is kind of my central issue with this discussion. We're almost at a sort of anything you say can and will be used against you in the court of law, but you should completely shielded from the court of public opinion. The idea that you should be held legally accountable for your behaviour in court but not publicly accountable doesn't sit well with me.

    It's almost a sort of "Don't hate the playa, hate the game" argument.

    Leave a comment:

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