You rang?Invictus ChiKen wrote:Okay where is that gif of Bugs Bunny cutting off Florida literally!?
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You rang?Invictus ChiKen wrote:Okay where is that gif of Bugs Bunny cutting off Florida literally!?
That can happen at any level of the judicial system. A cop can look the other way. A DA could refuse to press charges. A judge could hand down a ludicrously low sentence.Darth Wong wrote:Frankly, I've never liked the idea of jury nullification. What's the point of law if juries can throw it out the window at will?
In defense of jury nullification.Darth Wong wrote:Frankly, I've never liked the idea of jury nullification. What's the point of law if juries can throw it out the window at will?
because even if mislead by the "victim" it is still the individuals responsibility to verify the legality of the other "consenting adult"Darwin Mills and Morris Williams should have checked it out first and hit it later.
I would argue the whole reason the current system has the "smart person avoidance systems" is because of jury nullification. The OP is a perfect example of a case where it should have been used. That guy is probably going to be a registered sex offender for the rest of his life due to some serious legal bullshit.Darth Wong wrote: No, a common law society is supposed to work by judges setting precedent, not just any panel of 12 random assholes they pull off the street, none of whom were smart enough to get out of jury duty or trip the lawyers' smart person avoidance systems.
You will be surprised.... though this guy's behavior is inconsistent with someone using the "I thought she was 18" defense. At the very least it creates reasonable doubt that he possessed mens rea to commit a crime, namely had had to intend to commit one.Death from the Sea wrote:because even if mislead by the "victim" it is still the individuals responsibility to verify the legality of the other "consenting adult"Darwin Mills and Morris Williams should have checked it out first and hit it later.
now, I agree this is gonna catch guys on accident, BUT the minute you start allowing anyone to use the "I thought she was 18" defense, then of course the actual child molesters will follow suit and use this kind of incident a precedent.
They should take the girl away from her parents and the guys should slap a civil suit on their asses for allowing her to continually seduce older men.
I have a hard time believing a 13 year old can really match an 18 year old in "mature conversation skills" though and THAT should have tipped the guys off.
How should they do this? Check for ID? Perform background checks?Death from the Sea wrote:because even if mislead by the "victim" it is still the individuals responsibility to verify the legality of the other "consenting adult"
I actually think that actual child molesters going free because of the precedent would be a GOOD thing? Why? It would serve as an impetus for the legislatures to fix their own fuck ups. Something they have no motivation to do now. If molesters are repeatedly going free, the legislatures would have no choice but to make a law that protects innocent victims of deception, while at the same time closing a loophole that would allow actual molesters to go free. Sure temporarily it might suck for society, but in the long run society would be better off with better codified rape laws.now, I agree this is gonna catch guys on accident, BUT the minute you start allowing anyone to use the "I thought she was 18" defense, then of course the actual child molesters will follow suit and use this kind of incident a precedent.
Given the fact that guys are convicted felons I doubt such a suit would go over well and could in fact be considered harassment. IANAL but I dont think someone convicted of rape suing the "Rape Victim" would go over well in court, and could conceivably be considered a criminal act in itself. The statutory rape conviction really screws things up.They should take the girl away from her parents and the guys should slap a civil suit on their asses for allowing her to continually seduce older men.
Maybe, but then again I'm in my late 20's and sometime *I* have trouble with "mature conversation skills" due to social anxiety. And regardless of that, I'm thinking if this was an "all sex and no substance" relationship, I doubt anyone would be paying attention to mature conversation skills.I have a hard time believing a 13 year old can really match an 18 year old in "mature conversation skills" though and THAT should have tipped the guys off.
It basically serves as a check that the people have on the government. Like anything, it can be used for good or bad. We'd love to hear about a jury refusing to convict a gay couple of violating sodomy laws, for example. But there's also the danger that it could essentially legalize vigilantism or violence against certain groups of people.Darth Wong wrote:Frankly, I've never liked the idea of jury nullification. What's the point of law if juries can throw it out the window at will?
Thankfully the sodomy laws got struck down on '04Durandal wrote:It basically serves as a check that the people have on the government. Like anything, it can be used for good or bad. We'd love to hear about a jury refusing to convict a gay couple of violating sodomy laws, for example. But there's also the danger that it could essentially legalize vigilantism or violence against certain groups of people.Darth Wong wrote:Frankly, I've never liked the idea of jury nullification. What's the point of law if juries can throw it out the window at will?
No one wants to be seen as soft on kiddie sex. The judge isn't about to throw out an open-and-shut case of statutory rape, and the DA has an election to worry about. And jurors generally aren't told that they have the power of jury nullification, because nobody, not the judge, not the prosecution, not the defense, wants them to know about it.Lord MJ wrote:I never said that the legislature wasn't at fault, I was saying that the court system can't turn and point fingers at the legislature when despite the legislature's incompetance the courts could prevent crap like this from happening.
- Dismissal in the interests of justice.
- Jury Nullification (as in the Jury using some common sense)
- DA Dropping the Charges
Any of these things would've prevented this conviction in spite of whatever laws are on the books.
Jury nullification was certainly used to good effect in helping to demolish certain assholery on the part of a judge, who happened to be the Lord Mayor of London in 1670; not only did this asshole demanded that the jury hand in a guilty verdict, but also refused to let one of the defendants read the laws he was accused of breaking. The jury thought that was bullshit and refused to convict him on one of the charges, disturbing the peace. They got jailed too, until Chief Justice Vaughn released them on a writ of habeas corpus — he agreed that punishing a jury because they return a verdict you don't like was bullshit.Durandal wrote:It basically serves as a check that the people have on the government. Like anything, it can be used for good or bad.Darth Wong wrote:Frankly, I've never liked the idea of jury nullification. What's the point of law if juries can throw it out the window at will?
Victims aren't awarded damages in criminal cases.The Big I wrote:Did the "victim" receive any type of compensation being the victim of crime. Could this be part of the reason her parents were so quick to call the cops that they are “in” on the scam??
Well, they can be, usually for property crimes.Durandal wrote:Victims aren't awarded damages in criminal cases.The Big I wrote:Did the "victim" receive any type of compensation being the victim of crime. Could this be part of the reason her parents were so quick to call the cops that they are “in” on the scam??
Usually between 5 and ten years depending on the state.NeoGoomba wrote:Out of curiosity, what is the statute of limitations on statutory rape? And if its a few years, did porn stars who had scenes with Tracy Lords get thrown to the wolves when her real age was revealed?
TrueThat's restitution, not damages, I think. Criminal court won't get you the kind of gigantic payouts that civil court will, so it's hardly worth scamming for money.
1) Did you read the article? That *is* what tipped the guy off. That is why he went to talk to her father, and subsequently got fucked over, for it.Death from the Sea wrote:I have a hard time believing a 13 year old can really match an 18 year old in "mature conversation skills" though and THAT should have tipped the guys off.