on 05-05-2014 09:41 PM
A TEXAS judge has sentenced a confessed rapist to just five years’ probation, implying his 14-year-old victim was promiscuous and “wasn’t the victim she claimed to be”.
Sir Young, 20, pleaded guilty to raping the girl at their Booker T. Washington High School in Dallas when he was 18, even as she told him “no” and “stop”, according to the Dallas News .
But State District Judge Jeanine Howard stunned many when she opted for probation, which will include 45 days in jail, and also exempted him from standard sex-offender restrictions, such as staying away from children, attending sex offender treatment, undergoing a sex offender evaluation or refraining from watching pornography.
Howard told the News she made her decision partly because medical records showed the victim had had three sexual partners and had given birth to a baby — both claims the girl has denied.
“She wasn’t the victim she claimed to be,” Howard said. “He is not your typical sex offender.
Did the judge get it right?
on 07-05-2014 01:38 AM
on 07-05-2014 07:07 AM
I think it is intereresting where the concept of rape is going and I think it is implied in what might have had a hand in this sentencing.
Sex is no longer straight forward. The images that young people see today are completedly different to what occurred when I was 14/18. In fact they are competely different to 10 years ago.
The images and ideas of sex that kids know today are about submission and domination. The message that they get are that women are supposed to say "no" but all they really want is a guy to take charge. Magazine advertising has put women in much more sexually agressive yet submissive positions. TV is following close behind. That idea has even crossed into mainstream literature (50 Shades anyone?) and 80% of new books that I pick up that have sex in them, mirror that.
So when a 14 year old girl is flirting with an 18 year old and saying "yes" (as she was initially) but then says "no" at some stage, I can well imagine this young guy thinking it is simply part of the role.