Mustn't say r*p*.

Pure

Fiel a Verdad
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The advantageous position of the accuser has been stressed by some folks lately. Yet the defense has many 'cards' to play, e.g., the psychiatric history of the accuser, and overall, IMO, generally has the advantage. Here's another part of that advantage, in this particular courtroom: Allow the woman defendant, in testimony only to say she had 'sex' and she didn't want it. She must avoid saying "He raped me," or even "I was sexually assaulted," since it's too inflammatory.


Gag Order
A Nebraska judge bans the word 'rape' from his courtroom.


By Dahlia Lithwick

Posted Wednesday, June 20, 2007, at 7:27 PM ET
An accuser can be prohibited from using the word rape on the witness stand

Usually we leave it up to the linguists and philosophers to muse on the crazy relationship between words and their meanings. In the law, words—the important ones, at least—are defined narrowly, and judges, lawyers, and jurors are trusted to understand their meanings. It's precisely because language is so powerful in a courtroom that we treat it so reverently.

Yet a Nebraska district judge, Jeffre Cheuvront, suddenly finds himself in a war of words with attorneys on both sides of a sexual assault trial. More worrisome, he appears to be at war with language itself, and his paradoxical answer is to ban it: Last fall, Cheuvront granted a motion by defense attorneys barring the use of the words rape, sexual assault, victim, assailant, and sexual assault kit from the trial of Pamir Safi—accused of raping Tory Bowen in October 2004.

Safi's first trial resulted in a hung jury last November when jurors deadlocked 7-5. Responding to Cheuvront's initial language ban—which will be in force again when Safi is retried in July—prosecutors upped the ante last month by seeking to have words like sex and intercourse barred from the courtroom as well. The judge denied that motion, evidently on the theory that there would be no words left to describe the sex act at all. The result is that the defense and the prosecution are both left to use the same word—sex—to describe either forcible sexual assault, or benign consensual intercourse. As for the jurors, they'll just have to read the witnesses' eyebrows to sort out the difference.




Bowen met Safi at a Lincoln bar on Oct. 30, 2004. It is undisputed that they shared some drinks, and witnesses saw them leaving together. Bowen claims not to have left willingly and has no memory of the rest of that night. She claims to have woken up naked the next morning with Safi atop her, "having sexual intercourse with her." When she asked him to stop, he did.

Bowen testified for 13 hours at Safi's first trial last October, all without using the words rape or sexual assault. She claims, not unreasonably, that describing what happened to her as sex is almost an assault in itself. "This makes women sick, especially the women who have gone through this," Bowen told the Omaha World-Herald. "They know the difference between sex and rape."

Nebraska law offers judges broad discretion to ban evidence or language that present the danger of "unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues or misleading the jury." And it's not unheard-of for judges to keep certain words out of a courtroom. Words like victim have been increasingly kept out of trials, since they tend to imply that a crime was committed. And as Safi's lawyer, Clarence Mock, explains, the word rape is just as loaded. "It's a legal conclusion for a witness to say, 'I was raped' or 'sexually assaulted.' … That's for a jury to decide." His concern is that the word rape so inflames jurors that they decide a case emotionally and not rationally.

The real question for Judge Cheuvront, then, is whether embedded in the word sex is another "legal conclusion"—that the intercourse was consensual. And it's hard to conclude otherwise. Go ahead, use the word sex in a sentence. Asking a complaining witness to scrub the word rape or assault from her testimony is one thing.

Asking that she imply that she agreed to what her alleged assailant was doing to her is something else entirely. To put it another way: If the complaining witness in a rape trial has to describe herself as having had "intercourse" with the defendant, should the complaining witness in a mugging be forced to testify that he was merely giving his attacker a loan?
 
?

In NSW Australia the crime previously defined as "rape" doesnt exist any more. It is now called "aggravated sexual assault" it has not affected the rate of conviction at all which remains at only about 10% of those accused.

I think that the selection of juries in such trials is a much bigger problem. Most defence attorneys try to get a jury made up of middle class 'genteel ladies' . These are good people but a nasty thing like rape doesn't happen in their well ordered lives. They also appear to be the group most susceptable to the argument that "she must have led him on".

If you don't believe me, attend a rape trial and you will see that 60% plus of jurors fit this description. They regularly seem to aquit even in the face of quite compelling evidence.
 
Pure said:
Asking that she imply that she agreed to what her alleged assailant was doing to her is something else entirely. To put it another way: If the complaining witness in a rape trial has to describe herself as having had "intercourse" with the defendant, should the complaining witness in a mugging be forced to testify that he was merely giving his attacker a loan?
Very nice point. The really sad thing is that if the man is acquitted, there's nowhere to go. It's not like the prosecution can use the Appeals court to deal with the judge's ruling. If he loses, the issue isn't taken any further. It's obviously predjudicial to do what the judge did, but I don't see any way for it to be changed in the future, other than for judges to be removed by angry voters (which rarely happens anyway).

It's stupid-assed judges like this that caused sweeping changes like Megan's law. There was a story a week (sometimes more) on O'Reilly about some judge letting a pedophile off with a grotesquely short sentence (or none at all). We need them to have indepence in order to do their job. Unfortunately, for that to work, we need them to show compassion and intelligence at what they do. Sadly, it's often not the case.
 
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