RangerDave wrote:
And yet even then the cops focused on apparent discrepancies in her story and her reputation for "attention-seeking", leading them to approach the investigation from the perspective that she was lying. How much more likely do you think they'd be to do that if it was a more ambiguous allegation involving date rape and a suspect claiming it was consensual sex?
Probably not much more, because there was no DNA in this case. How the suspect accomplished that I don't know, but if you had this set of facts (evidence of penetration but no DNA) that points to using a toy on herself. Based on the evidence available at the time it was reasonable to think she had done it to herself.
You can't use the hindsight of finding out it really was him to complain about that, nor can you generalize from this case to rape cases in general.
Diamondeye wrote:
Innocent until proven guilty is a legal presumption in a trial. Outside of a court room, there should be no presumption either way. Cops in particular absolutely should not be making presumptions in either direction. They should simply go where the evidence takes them.
Obviously. However, if that evidence never reaches the point where they and the prosecutor feel the burden of proof can be met, then there should be no consequences to the suspect - which include the consequences of having a perpetual cloud hanging over them, or being expelled from school or anything else.
In the case you cited, the evidence never reached that point primarily because of the lack of the DNA. If there were DNA it would be a totally different story.
Diamondeye wrote:
Rape victims are not the same as any other crime victim because rape is not the same as any other crime. First of all, no other crime so frequently turns on the question of consent. Sure, theoretically you might consent to having someone beat you into unconsciousness in your living room, but I'm guessing cops don't spend a lot of time exploring that hypothetical when an assault allegation is made. For most crimes, the questions are (a) did the event itself happen and (b) was it the suspect who did it, whereas with rape, there's the added question of (c) did the victim consent to it. This automatically means the accusation is harder to prove and more likely to be questioned/doubted. Second, the mental/emotional trauma experienced by rape victims is significantly higher than for most other crime victims, and their recollection of events is often more jumbled and uncertain as a result. Conversely, most people expect trauma victims to be hysterical, even though many victims don't react with outward emotion. These factors can easily lead people who don't know better (and cops who aren't inclined to take them into account) to doubt a rape allegation. That's exactly what happened in the supposed "outlier" of a story I posted.
None of these are reasons why it should be treated differently from any other crime. Your argument essentially amounts to "the issue of consent makes rape a hard crime to prosecute, therefore we should compromise that burden of proof to compensate."
Rape, however, is not the only hard crime to prosecute, or the only crime where an action might or might not be legal depending on the exact circumstances. In theft cases "I had permission to take X/no he didn't" can definitely be an issue. Many other crimes experience practical problems in obtaining proof. We don't compromise on those crimes and there is not a reason to in regard to rape.
As to the victim, their level of trauma is pretty irrelevant. Victim services and concerns should not even enter into it. Furthermore, in falsified cases the victim obviously did not suffer such trauma, but, as UVA illustrates that won't stop them from claiming it. In your example, once again, you are failing to account for the lack of visible evidence of trauma being accompanied by a lack of DNA in a crime where, for obvious reasons, NOT leaving DNA is exceedingly difficult even with condom use.
Diamondeye wrote:
And this is a perfect example of the hostility people (including cops) often bring to the table when assessing rape allegations. They believe rape allegations are a "tool for political victim cred" and are anxious to ensure that any whiff of special treatment is "stomped hard at any and every opportunity", so they overcompensate in the other direction. Combined with the subjectivity of consent, the often sketchy memory of the victims, and skewed societal expectations of how a victim "should" react, this chip on the shoulder results in the "he said / she lied" dynamic I mentioned. That biased approach then gets wrapped in the cloak of "innocent until proven guilty" to justify it, even though any such presumption is inappropriate and even damaging in the investigative phase.
Except even your cited example fails to do that because the evidence - as you cited it - spoke to a false allegation, and it was only hindsight that revealed otherwise. It relies 100% on hindsight to make it's point, much like
The Life of David Gale (unintentionally) made an excellent case that the death penalty system works perfectly and that you have to go out of your way to frame yourself in order to be mistakenly executed. You need to truly be married to the idea that rape complaints are sancrosanct in order to think that example shows anything problematic.
We are not using "innocent until proven guilty" to justify it because there is nothing to justify. That is an ironclad principle fo this country, and can't be tampered with for pretty much anything short of national survival - and if that ever happens, most of the lawyers will be arguing the meaning of the Bill of Rights with the men that wrote it anyhow. That's the correct way to do things. People make false reports to the police all the time, but when you tar someone with allegations of a sex offense they carry a cloud of suspicion pretty much forever, and we've allowed educational institutions to make an end run around the Constitution in seizing from the suspect while following literally no procedural rules.
The fact is that this "beleive the victim!" nonsense is exactly what CAUSES THE PROBLEM you think exists in the first place. By insisting that every rape allegation be "believed" and thinking that EVERY rape allegation must be defended tooth and nail, no matter how absurd it is, any cloud of suspicion is entirely the fault of rape advocates, feminists, and other people that actually believe that if ANY allegation is not found to be 100% true it turns people against other victims.
This makes the advocates look suspect when they do things like "standing with Jackie" and reate these advocacy groups where you have to be a rape survivor to be taken seriously. It's even worse when you tag on laughable statistics like the "1 in 5 on campus are raped" or bewailing that there
aren't enough rape convictions. It's patently obvious that there is a significant movement here that is desperate for serious rape problems to exist, and that liberals in general will believe anything that allows them to avoid admitting any problem has actually been dealt with.