In the article “Die Trying”, Katie J.M. Baker points out the difficulties of being a rape victim in Alabama and nationwide. The article “Die Trying” talks about a student named Megan Rondini who attended the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa who accused T.J. Bunn Jr. of rape. The events that led to sexual assault happened in July 1, 2015 at night where Megan Rondini went to Innisfree Irish Pub with a couple of her sorority sisters and drank five cups of beer. After drinking the beer Megan Rondini blacked out and found herself in T.J. Bunn’s car with his friend going back to his house. When Bunn arrived at his house he told Rondini that he wanted to have sexual intercourse with her but she told him many times that she did not want to participate …show more content…
Rondini then went back to Bunn’s room and his car to see if she left her keys there and took a three dollars and a gun but dropped the gun when she fired it by mistake. Megan Rondini’s friend picked her up and drove her to the hospital at 2:40 a.m. When Megan Rondini went to the police station to file a report against Bunn and to be interviewed the investigators already doubted her. When Rondini’s story came to the part of grabbing the gun the investigators modified their questioning to her comportment of the previous night. The investigators did not test Megan Rondini’s urine or blood nor did they do a rape kit on her. Investigator Jones told Megan Rondini that based on her previous remarks it did not show that she refused him because “You never kicked him or hit him or tried to resist him”. Then Investigator Jones proposed Megan Rondini a “refusal to prosecute” form to sign but she declined because she wanted a public record of her accusations against Bunn. When T.J. Bunn Jr. arrived at the police station for his interview with his lawyer, Investigator Josh Hasting told Bunn “I’ll get y’all out of
Bennett Barbour: Sentenced for an Eyewitness Account On April 14, 1978, twenty-two year old Bennett Barbour was convicted of rape only due to an eyewitness account. On February 7, 1978, a nineteen year old college student of the College of William and Mary in Virginia, was sexually assaulted at gunpoint. She described her attacker as being a young, 22 to 24 years old, 5’6 tall and weighing in-between 140 to 150 pounds. The victim was told to pick from a series of pictures of those who look most like her attacker, eventually picking Barbour, whose picture had been in the database from an earlier petty charge, which led to his arrest on February 15, 1978, and eventual conviction on April 14, 1978.
He told her that she had HIV, even though she didn’t, and almost made her place her fingerprints on a potential murder weapon. The new media helped depict Mignini’s image of Knox and was overly biased towards the subject. Released for the conviction from the Italian police, she was convicted again in the US. Witness claimed that she was there at the night of the murder, even though she claimed not to
Amy Albritton went to Houston to a job offer that her boyfriend, Wilson, got. While Wilson was driving Albritton’s car they were stopped by a police. The officer David Helms, with the consent of Albritton, searched her car. Helms found a white crumb on the floor, the officer believed it was crack cocaine,.
Policy Analysis: Megan’s Law Sexual violence, particularly against children, is a significant issue all around the world. In the early 1990’s in the United States, there were multiple well-publicized cases of sexual violence against children. From kidnappings, to rapes, and everything in between, violence was being committed against children and something needed to be done about it. In 1996, Megan’s Law was passed in response to the sexual assault and death of Megan Kanka, a seven-year-old from New Jersey (Corrigan, 2006).
I have elected to write about The Serial Rapist Is Not Who You Think by Tim Madigan. Tim Madigan focus his attention on rapists who dress nice, speak well, and look like normal citizens. Madigan describes them as “charming on the outside, hateful and manipulative within” (Madigan). He continues to explain that too often these crimes go unpunished because of the circumstance to which these crimes occur. Madigan referred to these situations as “acquaintance rape” (Madigan).
Talk to the detectives. She ain’t in there, Robert.” Due to the overwhelming amount of evidence stacked against him, Robert McCoy was arrested for the crimes. Since McCoy was not able
In the article, “Family of Man Cleared by DNA Still Seeks Justice,” Wade Goodwyn writes about the rape of Michele Mallin and the confession that sets free a wrongly convicted man. Timothy Cole, a student in Lubbock was arrested and convicted as the Texas Tech rapist based on the eyewitness account of one victim. On Sunday night, March 24th, 1985, Michele Mallin, a college sophomore at the time, needed to move her vehicle to a legal parking spot after forgetting to earlier that day. At around 10pm, after finishing moving her car, a man appeared asking her for jumper cables to fix his broke down car. Mallin recalls him pushing her back into her own car, threatening to kill her with a knife and chain-smoking the entire time during the attack.
On June 22, 2013 police search Hernandez’s home again for the second time. They also learned of a condo that Hernandez was renting that his fiance knew nothing about. It was searched as well. Guns and ammunition was found at the condo. Detectives confiscated two cell phones, .22 caliber ammunition, a scale with a dish (for drug purpose), three iPads, a digital video recorder, a computer hard drive that was part of the home’s security system, and a gunshot residue kit.
Yet a sober analysis of the matter reveals that the victim is important and the fact that Brock Turner sexually assaulted her should not be disregarded just because he was a great student and athlete. Dan Turner blames the partying culture of college for his son’s behavior but in reality, there is no excuse for sexual
In the summer of 2002, Brian Banks, a 16-year-old outstanding high school football linebacker from Long Beach Polytechnic High in Southern California had a promising future ahead of him. He had a verbal agreement to play for USC once he finished high school, but he had a lot of recruitment letters coming to him. Unfortunately, his future was cut short. Wanetta Gibson, a 15-year-old who also attended Long Beach Polytechnic, had accused Brian Banks of rape. That summer morning, Wanette and Brian were making out in the stairwell of the school, that night, Brian was being arrested for rape.
Hae’s boyfriend at the time, Don Clinedinst was cleared early in the case, however police never actually checked his albi. He had told police that he was working at Hunt Valley LensCrafters store that day. This was a store that he did not normally work at. Susan Simpson a colleague of Chaudry’s did her own investigating and discovered that the manager of that store was Don’s mother. The schedule did not indicate that there was a change in the lab tech schedule for that day.
Terry and Chilton are taking turns walking past a store front on a fall afternoon in Cleveland, Ohio. They each pass the store six times and then meet with a third man- Katz. A nearby police officer- Officer McFadden, notices the odd behavior of the pair and conducts a stop and frisk of all three men, which reveals two concealed weapons. In the subsequent trial for the charges of carrying a concealed weapon, the prosecution filed a motion for the suppression of the recovered guns as evidence citing that the manner in which the evidence was obtained was unlawful and inadmissible in court as a result.
The characters, especially men, in Courage Under Fire and Boys Don’t Cry do not accept or respect the characters who have different genders. They believe that they are better than the other characters, just because they are men. The men in Courage Under Fire either see Captain Karen Emma Walden as a hero and someone who deserves the Congressional Medal of Honor, or as someone who does not deserve the award just because she is a woman. “In the old days, strong sturdy women were almost admired” (Silko, 66), this quote from Yellow Woman and the Beauty of the Spirit show that just like the strong Laguna Pueblo women are admired, Captain Walden is also admired by multiple men in the film.
A book that I recently read that showed a reflection of my self-understanding was Missoula by Jon Krakauer because it extended my perspective on women’s safety on college campuses. The book Missoula shares stories of five women who were sexually assaulted at the University of Montana, Missoula and follows their cases all the way to trial. As a girl who has always been told that a college education is necessary to succeed in life, the idea that colleges arent safe for me felt like a secret that I wasnt allowed to know until I experienced it for myself. Reading the statistics and seeing how all of the rapists walked away unpunished strengthened my understanding of the fact that sexual assault is a normal occurance on college campuses.
Maria Cabrera Documentary Reflection The Hunting Ground is a documentary film targeting the frequent sexual assaults on college campuses in the United States. Colleges across the United States have failed to meet justice for victims with confrontations. The film is concentrated on Annie. E. Clark and Andrea Pino, two graduates of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who decided to file a complaint about their assaults while they were attending the University.