Nailer wrote: ↑January 8th, 2018, 11:52 am
I have said before that the Pacific Northwest is dangerous for men. This goes beyond anything we've ever seen.
A girl going home from a concert gets pulled over for drunk driving and claims the band of the concert she went to, who she has never met, gang-raped her. The band members spend three months in prison.
Now it turns out the story is completely made up, and charges are being dropped.
Jeffry Finer, attorney for Piotrowski, said the accuser was heavily involved in the decision to drop charges.
But look at how this is being spun. They are dropping the charges because a trial would be too hard on the victim (the lying accuser):
“This has been traumatizing to her,” Fitzgerald said of the accuser. “It’s obviously something that is a multiple defender case, and it would be a lengthy trial.”
Fitzgerald said while the state has a responsibility to the community in prosecuting crimes, in special assault cases they also have to be cognizant of victims, in this case a young woman.
“We’ve discussed with her and her advocates and feel at this time it’s best for her to heal,” she said.
This evil girl puts four innocent guys in jail and the entire justice system is white knighting for her even after admitting she lied. She's a proven liar and they are still giving her the victim treatment.
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2018/j ... l-memb/#/0
Was she gang-raped by someone else and really confused?
I read a man broke into a woman's house once, turned her around, and raped her from behind. The TV was on and she saw a TV news anchor on TV. She called the police and insisted the TV news anchor raped her. He had a solid alibi being on TV, so it wouldn't stick. Somehow in her mind she processed the trauma as being raped by that guy.
Still-- three months-- that's not justice or a speedy trial. If there was no evidence other than her word, they shouldn't have detained these men. The state should at least compensate men it detains under such circumstances.
And if she was intentionally lying about these men, instead of just being messed up in the head and confused from trauma, they should go after her legally, whether she was gang raped or not. The penalty should be three months in jail plus whatever they would have gotten had they been convicted.
If you intentionally falsely accuse someone of a death penalty crime, the false accusation should be a death penalty crime as well.
If legislators and judges would take the attitude that it is better for a rapist to go free than to send an innocent person to be raped in prison, things might function a little better.