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Friday, January 7, 2011

Rape Shield Laws Convicted Me

     My accuser had a history of falsely accusing men of rape, was mentally ill, a drug addict, homeless, an alcoholic, and falsely accused me of rape in order to file an unjust million dollar lawsuit. There was no evidence that I raped her or that she was ever "raped". Her only evidence was her tainted word. Any jury could see that this woman was nuts and only accusing me for money. However; none of this woman's "past" could be used in court due to unconstitutional Rape Shield Laws that hides vital evidence from juries. I was convicted on the sole word of a whacked out, serial false accuser, on drugs, who accused me for money. To learn more about this insane law check out this article -

Do "rape shield" laws violate the right to a fair trial?

Obviously, laws that prohibit the media from naming a rape victim or even a woman who makes a false accusation (such as Crystal Gail Mangum from the Duke Lacrosse Case) are a flagrant violation of the 1st Amendment and have been declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court (Cox Broadcasting Corporation v. Cohn and Florida Star v. B.J.F).

However, aren't the similar laws that undermine the ability of the defense attorney to cross-examine an accuser a similar violation of the Constitution, since everybody who is accused of a crime is supposed to receive a fair trial?

I understand that radical feminists assert that it is traumatic for women who are accusing a man of rape to have to be cross-examined in a court of law, but isn't that argument beside the point? Afterall, aren't people who are accused of a crime supposed to be considered innocent until they are proven guilty and aren't they supposed to have the right to confront their accuser? If you accuse somebody of a crime, but are unable to handle being cross-examined by a defense attorney, wouldn't it be a better idea to just forget about bringing a criminal case against somebody in the first place rather than trying to deny the person you are accusing his right to a fair trial?

If a law was proposed to "shield" a person who accused another person of any crime other than rape (for example, a "theft shield" law), wouldn't everybody see that law as flagrantly unconstitutional?

Cathy Young, an excellent writer on men's and women's issues, did a piece on Rape Shield Laws for Reason Magazine and included my case in her article.

Excluded Evidence

The dark side of rape shield law

                                                                                                                          Many continuing threats to civil liberties in America are completely unrelated to terrorism or to national security. Furthermore, many civil libertarians are silent about these abuses, because they are motivated by "progressive" goals -- such as ostensibly protecting women from abuse.

Consider the widening reach and the unintended consequences of rape shield laws. These statutes, hailed as a way to keep victims from being smeared as sluts in court, have sometimes kept juries from hearing evidence highly relevant to the guilt or innocence of the accused.
On November 1, a court in Manhattan dismissed all charges against Oliver Jovanovic, a student at Columbia University. Jovanovic was at the center of a notorious "cybersex" case involving an Internet acquaintance, a real-life date, and accusations of kidnapping, sexual assault, and sexual torture.
In 1998, Jovanovic was convicted of attacking Barnard College student Jamie Rzucek (whose name has been disclosed by some media outlets after the case was dismissed) and was sentenced to a minimum of 15 years in prison. Rzucek claimed that Jovanovic held her captive in his apartment for 20 hours and subjected her to torture and sexual abuse. The defense argued that there was no torture -- Rzucek's claim that Jovanovic forcibly sodomized her was disputed by medical evidence, and the jury returned a not-guilty verdict on the counts pertaining to this act -- and that the bondage was consensual.
This argument was crippled by Judge William Wetzel's decision to exclude portions of the e-mail correspondence between Jovanovic and Rzucek in which she discussed her adventures in sadomasochism, including her sadomasochistic relationship with another man. The messages, the judge held, were inadmissible under New York State's rape shield law because they had to do with the accuser's sexual conduct.
In late 1999, the Appellate Division of the New York State Supreme Court, by a 3-to-1 vote, set aside the conviction on the grounds that Judge Wetzel had applied the rape shield law improperly and left the jury with a "distorted view of the evidence." The case was sent down for retrial, but Rzucek proved reluctant to testify a second time, and prosecutors eventually sought a dismissal "in the interests of justice." Jovanovic's vindication came at a high price: as much as $500,000 in legal fees, not to mention 20 months spent in state penitentiaries.
Rape shield laws, which mostly date from the 1970s and are virtually universal today, enjoy broad public support. In surveys, about three-quarters of Americans agree that a woman's past sexual life should not be an issue in a rape case. Indeed, it seems obvious that to quiz a woman who says she was raped about whether she has had two, 10, or 20 sexual partners is not only cruel and degrading but irrelevant to the question of whether she consented to sex with the man in the dock. But in quite a few cases, rape shield laws have been applied to evidence that has a direct bearing on the credibility of the accuser (and, sometimes, only the most tenuous connection to her sexual past).
Prior to the Jovanovic trial, the most notorious case to raise these issues was that of sportscaster Marv Albert, who was accused by his longtime friend and sex partner Vanessa Perhach of oral sodomy and assault. At the 1997 trial, notable for tawdry details of transvestitism and kinky sex, Albert's attorneys wanted to bring up Perhach's alleged conduct with other men, particularly men who left her -- as Albert, who was getting married, was about to do. She had reportedly harassed and threatened a former boyfriend's family, and may have made false accusations of crimes as a form of revenge. A former lover was also willing to testify that biting, on which the assault charge against Albert was based, was a part of her sexual repertoire.
All this testimony was barred by Circuit Court Judge Benjamin Kendrick. (Meanwhile, a woman who came forward with a claim that Albert had sexually assaulted her several years earlier was allowed to take the stand.) With the defense's hands tied, Albert pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault. The outcome struck many observers -- even those, such as Geraldo Rivera, who are generally sympathetic to victims' rights -- as shockingly unfair.
And then there are the more obscure cases:
-- In Wisconsin in 1993, 18-year-old Charles Steadman was convicted of raping his 22-year-old foster sister Jessica in a he said/she said case in which physical evidence of force was absent and the defendant claimed that the sex was consensual. What the jury didn't know was that when Jessica filed the complaint, she herself was facing criminal charges of having sex with minors. (She eventually received probation with mandatory psychiatric treatment.) Clearly, this gave her a reason to lie -- particularly since she had had sexual relations with Steadman when he was underage. She might have thought that being a victim would improve her legal situation as a defendant, or she might have worried that if her encounter with Steadman became known, she would get in more trouble with the law. None of these possible motives could be introduced at Steadman's trial, since Jessica's legal problems were related to her past sexual activities and hence inadmissible.
-- In Oregon in 1989, James Anderson was convicted of raping "Donna R." while both were patients at a substance-abuse clinic. Anderson insisted that the sex was consensual and that Donna made up the charges in order to sue the clinic, which threw her out the morning after the alleged rape because she wouldn't sign up for long-term treatment. After initially claiming that she had tried to tell clinic staffers about the attack but was rebuffed, Donna reversed herself under cross-examination and said that she had not spoken about it to any of them because she was too embarrassed. In his summation, the prosecutor sneered that the defense expected a rape victim to "just walk up to one of the staff" and discuss "those most intimate details."
The jurors were never told that the day before, she had discussed equally "intimate details" -- an alleged earlier rape and childhood sexual abuse -- with one of the counselors. All records of this conversation were excluded from the trial under the rape shield law as pertaining to the accuser's sexual history; so was the fact that Donna had given several inconsistent accounts of her prior sexual victimization. Whether or not Donna was raped, the case seemed to leave ample room for reasonable doubt -- particularly if one knew that Donna was not a reliable witness.
When rape shield laws were first enacted as part of the rape law reforms initiated by the feminist movement, they were a response to truly abusive practices. Just 30 years ago, jurors in rape cases were often formally instructed to consider evidence of "unchaste character" (such as going to bars alone, extramarital liaisons, and use of birth control) as detracting from the complainant's credibility or indicating that she was more likely to have consented to sex.
But in recent years, even some feminist legal theorists, such as Vivian Berger, have expressed concern that the pendulum may have swung too far. Granted, the accuser's past sexual conduct is not automatically excluded -- just as, before shield laws, it wasn't automatically allowed. Her prior relations with the accused are generally admissible; so is evidence that the pregnancy or disease alleged to have resulted from the rape may have been caused by sex with someone else. In some states, other evidence may be admitted at the judge's discretion.
Most of the time, however, the burden is on the defendant to show that the value of this evidence to his case outweighs its "prejudicial effect" on the complainant. In several states (including Alabama, Iowa, and Washington), courts have held that excluding evidence of an earlier false or dubious rape complaint by the accuser does not deny the accused a fair trial -- even, perhaps, if the evidence is relevant to the question of his innocence.
In some cases, such as People v. Jovanovic, appellate courts have curbed the worst abuses of rape shield laws. But this is an issue that is overdue for a new look by legislatures, even if reforms are likely to engender a furious reaction from feminist groups. 

5 comments:

  1. This is a great compiling of cases and what is wrong with our system. I am a rape victim, thought I was a feminist (except the women I meet that claim that title often share none of my values i.e. all people are equal and should be able to pursue whatever life they choose so long as it doesn't harm others and I don't hate men or boys) and the mother of a very young man who was falsely accused, tried, convicted, had his conviction reversed, and plead to a low level felony that was totally different from his original charges just to get out and home to his family after 2 years of prison and fearing for his life as a convicted sex offender. It shocking how easily false accusations are allowed to snowball with no evidence at all, as none is required. In our case the DA eventually agreed that he should not be made to register (after 2 years!) but would not go to the point of admitting that they had failed miserable in a pursuit of justice. Today he is NOT a registered sex offender, but what has been stolen from him this last two year (18yo - 20yo) pales in comparison to what I lost as a rape victim, and I lost a lot!

    It should be noted this women was nearly 5 year older than my son (who was barely 18 and looked much younger, no facial to speak of and 120 lbs)and had a documented (in her own words, on line) history of soliciting young boys and offering to buy them alcohol as well as two previous false claims of rape. Not only was my son falsely accused but an actual pedophile is hunting boys as we speak and the DA is doing nothing to stop it. She bought a new computer shortly after the trail, I think she used her 'victims compensation' money to pay for it. Lock up your sons..or the state will.

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  2. There are thousands of innocent men in prison and more being falsely accused every day for rapes they did not commit. This is caused because there is no deterrent to lying sociopathic females who say they were raped as an excuse, or for attention, or for many other reasons that are commonly known to our society. However the (in)justice system is broken and it appears that it is getting worse instead of being fixed. If we are going to keep the Rape Shield Law, then there needs to be an equal law for men called the Rape Shield Law Shield. This law should say that whenever a female thinks she can have consensual sex, then say it was a rape in an effort to use this as an excuse for something else, and she is found out to be a sociopathic liar, then she should serve 20 years to life in prison.

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  3. So sorry for your trouble, but you'll get over it....

    ...way faster than the 35 or so women who are raped every minute will recover from the wrongs committed against them. Laws are always inadequate - ask a black man in a Texas jail. Up until 50 years ago the laws were tilted the other way - a rape victim was not just traumatized by evidence of her sexual history being discussed in open court, but her case was often completely derailed by it. Juries would hear of some prurient detail of her life and decide that she "had it coming." The victim's clothing choices were also available as evidence of what she "wanted," and used against her to attempt to show that she was immoral. It was okay to find a rapist not guilty if the victim "wanted it" or was a "trollope."

    So now the pendulum swings both ways. Rape shield laws are full of wholes, allowing the victim's privacy to be violated, allowing her to be forced to rationalize her private life, allowing the jury to be invited to reduce her to whatever she once let her boyfriend do. Rapists are still more likely to go free than be convicted. And a few, very, very few, supposedly innocent men are wrongly convicted. Sorry it was you this time, but I can live with it.

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    Replies
    1. 1. "Sorry for your trouble, but you'll get over it..." now imagine your glib statement would go over for a true rape victim. Congrats, you're winning the race to the bottom of moral character.
      2. "Sorry it was you at this time, but I can live with it." Glad to know that you are OK with laws that violate the Sixth amendment. Send me a note the next time you make a false rape accusation, so I can file an amicus brief (not that you'd even know what that is). Also, see point 1 above.
      3. Alleged victims have absolutely 0 constitutional rights (as compared with any other witness). Any alleged victim's privacy interests are penumbral (I don't expect you to know what that means either), but more importantly, in a criminal case, the alleged victim is NOT a party to the case. These "rape shield laws" (or "emotionally fragile victim laws" as I prefer) attempt to confer rights on non-parties, which is without precedent (not to mention logical basis), as well as subvert the sixth amendment right to confrontation of a defendant's accuser (the defendant is almost always a man, so according to RadFems like you, they don't deserve any rights).
      4. A hypothetical sexually promiscuous woman, identical to a hypothetical non-promiscuous woman in every way except for promiscuity, is, by definition, more likely to consent to any given sexual encounter, and is thus more likely to have consented to the encounter in question (the rape charge). Her promiscuity will almost always be relevant, but thanks to people like you and Catherine MacKinnon (the nutjob who first proposed this ludicrous notion), rape defendants are categorically denied an entire avenue of cross-examination TO WHICH THEY ARE CONSTITUTIONALLY ENTITLED. Here's an idea, instead of dressing up for Slutwalk and getting so hammered that you can barely stand up, take measures to protect yourself, or am I "mansplaining" too much?

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