Saturday, January 11, 2014

Not Prosecuting Rape: The Daisy Case (and how many others... every week?)

The Kansas City Star Editorial has some good points about The Rape of Daisy Coleman

Read it in full HERE http://www.kansascity.com/2014/01/09/4739648/editorial-lenient-charge-doesnt.html


..."The prosecutor’s decision doesn’t diminish the appalling nature of what happened to two young girls who slipped out of one’s bedroom to meet up with a popular high school athlete and his friends in January 2012. Both girls, then ages 14 and 13, ended up in a hospital the next day. The older girl and her family, especially, faced harassment and bullying from people in town who supported the boys.

"The girl and her family were forced to relocate to another town, and their house in Maryville burned down from a cause never determined.

"Matthew Barnett pleaded guilty Thursday to a misdemeanor charge of child endangerment. He admitted to abandoning the 14-year-old girl outside her home in the cold after having sex with her at his home. He will not face jail time; he was given a four-month suspended sentence and probation.

..."In the case of the 13-year-old girl, a boy who was 15 at the time acknowledged having sex with the girl against her will. He served two weeks in the custody of Missouri’s Division of Youth Services and then returned home for treatment — another outcome that seems lenient.
A third young man was initially charged with felony sexual exploitation for allegedly videotaping a sexual encounter between Barnett and the 14-year-old girl. Prosecutors were unable to locate the recording, however.
In contrast to the prosecutor in Nodaway County, who developed an adversarial relationship with the 14-year-old victim and her mother, Baker made it clear that she thought the girl had been harmed. Baker said her task was to reach a resolution that gave the teenager and her family a sense of justice and enabled her to move on with her life.

Sadly, the victim, now 16, is in a hospital this week after a suicide attempt that her mother said was prompted by cruel postings on social media sites...

The Star Editorial ends with this statement:

"This is a troubling case that has upended a number of lives. The best thing now is to hope for and work toward healing. And parents might look at Maryville as a case study of all that can go wrong when young people underestimate the value of respect — for themselves and for others."

This is a sentiment i have been hearing and reading over and over, week after week, year after year. SPARE ME.

previous posts:
http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2013/10/latest-in-marysville-rape-case-from.html
http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2013/10/insanity-in-prosecuting-rape.html
http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2013/10/town-burns-rape-victims-home.html


http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2009/12/blaming-rapist.html

http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2011/04/we-have-to-be-bitches-to-whole-world-or.html

http://marysbeagooddogblog.blogspot.com/2012/05/talk-about-rape-in-public.html










2 comments:

  1. "And parents might look at Maryville as a case study of all that can go wrong when young people underestimate the value of respect — for themselves and for others."

    And so the question is: How do we teach the value of respect when we live in a culture of violence and disrespect that is promoted by Popular Culture and amplified 100 fold by the social media and the internet?
    Gender is a central issue to all of it.

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  2. I find it terribly sad that this case has been drawn out for two years, and in that time the pain as a result of what happened that awful night, has driven a young teen to two attempted suicides. It is my greatest hope that the victims and their families will find healing and inner strength with time.

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