We often mention Federal Rule of Evidence 413 as an example of a grave institutionalized injustice to presumptively innocent men and boys accused of rape (even the very mention of a court rule sounds boring --stay with us, it isn't). Some would twist our concerns about this rule as the overblown hyperbole of a "rape apologist." It is anything but that, but -- and this is the crucial part -- we don't want you to take our word for it.
There is a report written by the United States Judicial Conference, quoted below, that spells out the possible injustices of this Rule to the presumptively innocent in words so chilling, that we need not characterize it, all we need do is quote it.
First, some background. Rule 413 (and related Rules 414 and 415) allow the prosecution to demonstrate a rape defendant’s alleged propensity to sexually attack women and children by introducing into evidence prior rapes he committed to show that the man on trial acted in conformity with this supposed character trait. This rule is an exception to the general rule: for no other crime is such "propensity" evidence admissible. The prior rape need only be proved by a preponderance of the evidence -- 50.000001%. The prior rape is admissible into evidence even if the man never takes the stand, and even if the man had been criminally acquitted of the prior sexual offense (despite the 5th Amendment right not to testify and prohibition against double jeopardy); and even if the alleged prior rape occurred many years ago, when a middle-aged man was a teenager or a young man in his early 20s (despite the loss, due to the passage of time, of any alibi evidence in his favor). This rule is also applicable to civil matters involving alleged sex torts. The effect of the rule -- indeed, the purpose of the rule -- is to lead the jury to conclude that since he did it before, he likely must have done it this time, too. The jury might even want to punish him because it figures he must have done it one of the times.
The import of this is lost on a society where advocacy for persons accused of sex crimes is dismissed as "rape apologism."
But again, don't take the word of an advocate. Under the Historical Notes to Rule 413, you will find a report from the Judicial Conference regarding recommendations for amending the Federal Rules of Evidence. The Judicial Conference is a body statutorily authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 331. It is comprised of the Chief Justice of the United States, the chief judge of each court of appeals, a district court judge from each regional judicial circuit, and the chief judge of the Court of International Trade. The Judicial Conference has five standing advisory committees, made up of judges, representatives of the Department of Justice, legal scholars, and leading practitioners. One of the duties of the Judicial Conference is to recommend changes for the rules of court that govern judicial proceedings, including the Rules of Evidence.
The Report of the Judicial Conference on proposed Rule 413 recommended against passage of the Rule in terms so strong that it should give pause to persons of good will regarding the treatment of presumptively innocent men and boys accused of sex crimes.
Congress enacted the Rule in spite of these strong recommendations.
The Report states, among other things -- and read this carefully:
". . . the new rules, which are not supported by empirical evidence, could diminish significantly the protections that have safeguarded persons accused in criminal cases and parties in civil cases against undue prejudice. These protections form a fundamental part of American jurisprudence and have evolved under long-standing rules and case law. A significant concern identified by the committee was the danger of convicting a criminal defendant for past, as opposed to charged, behavior or for being a bad person."
The Report notes that the Advisory Committee on Evidence Rules, comprised of judges, legal scholars, and well respected members of the bar, "was unanimous except for a dissenting vote by the representative of the Department of Justice" in objecting to the Rule. The Advisory Committee on Evidence Rules "considered the public responses, which included 84 written comments, representing 112 individuals, 8 local and 8 national legal organizations. The overwhelming majority of judges, lawyers, law professors, and legal organizations who responded opposed new Evidence Rules 413, 414, and 415. The principal objections expressed were that the rules would permit the admission of unfairly prejudicial evidence . . . ."
Further, the Report says, "[t]he Advisory Committees on Criminal and Civil Rules unanimously, except for representatives of the Department of Justice, also opposed the new rules. Those committees also concluded that the new rules would permit the introduction of unreliable but highly prejudicial evidence and would complicate trials . . . ."
Again -- Congress ignored all of it. And a number of states have enacted their own version of these rules.
I don't know what scares you, but that scares me.
But if that doesn't give you sufficient pause, then consider this: then-Senator Joseph Biden, found the new Rule repugnant. Biden stated: "[Under these rules,] the prosecutor, instead of just having to deal with that witness and those facts, is able to go out and find anybody who is willing to say, 'By the way, when he was 21 years old when we were parked in the car he physically molested me,' without any proof of anything. Now, the people who might . . . have been around to prove that that was not the case, the couple you double dated with in the front seat of the car, are dead. But you have a witness, the one person sitting there, who says, 'But that happened to me 25 years ago.'" 140 Cong.Record S12,261 (August 22, 1994). Biden declared that he had "a moral, intellectual, and practical aversion" to this rule. Id.
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The balancing act necessary, on the one hand, to convict rapists, and on the other, to insure that the innocent are not punished for purported crimes they didn't commit, is sufficiently difficult without having shrill extremists, who would ignore the latter half of that equation, dominate the public discourse about rape. But that's exactly what has happened in America. Such extremists routinely dismiss, trivialize, and even mock, serious concerns about the injustices suffered by the presumptively innocent accused of rape by suggesting that such concerns are manufactured by so-called "men's rights advocates" bent on apologizing for rapists.
Nothing, of course, could be further from the truth, and that slander only underscores both the extremism and depravity of their advocacy. It isn't just Rule 413 where the public discourse on rape has been warped by morally elite extremists unwilling even to consider the needs of the presumptively innocent. Some other examples of the ways men and boys accused of rape are treated differently than persons accused of other crimes:
▲Despite an avalanche of well-founded concerns, colleges are now required by law to adjudicate sexual assault and similar claims -- but no other offenses -- using the lowest standard of proof (preponderance of the evidence). If a student is accused of stealing a small sum of money from another student, he or she likely will have a disciplinary claim adjudicated under a clear and convincing evidence standard (which is higher than a preponderance of the evidence standard). If a student is accused of the far more serious crime of rape, the claim against him must be adjudicated under a preponderance of the evidence standard, the lowest standard of proof in our jurisprudence.
▲The American news media defends publishing the names and photographs of presumptively innocent men merely accused of rape, despite the often terrible harm such publicity does to their reputations, but refuses to engage in any serious discussion about ending anonymity for rape accusers. See, e.g., here and here. For the harm the media can do to innocent men, see this report in light of these facts.
Yet, advocacy for the men and boys wrongly accused is dismissed as "rape apologism" by the same persons who become apoplectic when they are reminded that Blackstone's Formulation (it is "better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer") applies to rape claims as well as every other alleged crime, and who can't understand why anyone would be alarmed when feminists advocate literally making the sex act a presumptive crime whenever a woman cries rape by reversing the burden of proof and making the defendant prove consent. See here and here and here.
There is a vast difference between "rape apologism" and expressing well-founded concerns for the rights of the presumptively innocent. To conflate the two, as extremists are wont to do, is morally grotesque and disqualifies them as serious voices on issues about rape.
Friday, September 16, 2011
By law, persons accused of sex crimes are afforded fewer rights than persons accused of other crimes
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18 comments:
It always amazes me:
Isn't all this clearly anti-constitutional? Against international Human Rights?
This perversion of due process and the law, how can this pass muster of ACLU, Supreme Court, etc?
It sounds weird, but there really seems to be a successful feminist conspiracy to deprive men of their rights.
I am against conspiracy theories, but do you have a more parsimonious explanation for all this absurdity?
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1670999
Sorry don't know how to link except cut and paste
ya,okay someone should really challenge this thing in court-F*CKING FEMINAZIS!!!
The folks that now lead the American ACLU are very selective of the cases they engage, and protecting hetero-sexuals is not very high on their list of priorities.
The ACLU's current agenda is very interwoven with new "gender, gender-Raunch" causes, and that doesn't involve protecting hetero-sexual men and boys constitutional rights to defend themselves from a false rape accusation.
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CBoQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fpapers.ssrn.com%2Fsol3%2Fpapers.cfm%3Fabstract_id%3D1670999&rct=j&q=http%3A%2F%2Fpapers.ssrn.com%2Fsol3%2Fpapers.cfm%3Fabstract_id%3D1670999&ei=vSh0ToLhLsHg0QHf2cHMDQ&usg=AFQjCNGIlBc7j8gPCoObyynwDH81YtL4Mg&cad=rja
there you go anonymous
sounds weird, but there really seems to be a successful feminist conspiracy to deprive men of their rights.
It's successful because of the MEN in power.
@ Billy Williams: your linking was worse than mine!
Anyone care to comment on the paper I linked to? It is titled
"The Devastating Impact of Prior Crimes Evidence – And Other Myths of the Criminal Justice Process"
Here's the abstract:
"Abstract:
There is abundant empirical evidence that prior criminal convictions weigh heavily in jurors’ decision about acquittal and conviction. That same evidence suggests that jurors learning that defendant has been convicted of prior crimes makes very little difference to conviction rates. This seeming paradox is examined in considerable detail. Understanding how and why it arises suggests that the tendency in American law to suppress information about priors (except under special circumstances) is a self-defeating strategy that not only lacks a convincing epistemic foundation but may also be responsible for the inadvertent conviction of innocent defendants. Arguably, it is often not the admission of priors that is unfairly prejudicial so much as their exclusion"
So it appears that excluding evidence of prior criminal convictions may actually contribute to the conviction of innocent people.
More common is the suppression of exculpatory
evidence.
Judges are NOT required to follow every law in their courtroom, only the laws that the judge "feels" are relevant to the proceedings at the time.
Say for instance s courthouse secretary used a typewriter to check all the boxes on a claim of domestic violence ex-parte
restraining order:
It is illegal for the clerk to fill out this from, but bring it up in court and it gets ignored.
In my case the fact that the plaintiff could not read her own complaint,nor even recognize the document, was inadmissable to exonerate.
There where 30 individual claims of violence on the form she signed,her testimony in open court was that none of it happened,yet the judge claimed that " I should watch myself" because he would sign another ex-parte order upon request.
That was a total travesty and abuse of power in light of her total denial of the claim.
The trial went on for hours in a fishing expedition after she denied any DV.
Also her claim was free to her.
My appeal cost filing fees and massive lawyers fees.
The prosecutor volunteered on public funded time to defend her in the civil matter after the criminal charges where proved to be false.
This one-sidedness is so common as to be unmentionable, yet makes a fair trial for males impossible in today's insane star chamber proceedings.
The law be damned, it is not admissable in court!
Anonymous said...
@ Billy Williams: your linking was worse than mine!
Anyone care to comment on the paper I linked to? It is titled
"The Devastating Impact of Prior Crimes Evidence – And Other Myths of the Criminal Justice Process"
Here's the abstract:
"Abstract:
There is abundant empirical evidence that prior criminal convictions weigh heavily in jurors’ decision about acquittal and conviction. That same evidence suggests that jurors learning that defendant has been convicted of prior crimes makes very little difference to conviction rates. This seeming paradox is examined in considerable detail. Understanding how and why it arises suggests that the tendency in American law to suppress information about priors (except under special circumstances) is a self-defeating strategy that not only lacks a convincing epistemic foundation but may also be responsible for the inadvertent conviction of innocent defendants. Arguably, it is often not the admission of priors that is unfairly prejudicial so much as their exclusion"
So it appears that excluding evidence of prior criminal convictions may actually contribute to the conviction of innocent people.
Sep 17, 2011 9:01:00 PM
Here is a shorter URL;
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1670999
Anon at 9:01 pm: kindly provide the full document. Among other things, we are not just talking about admitting evidence of a prior conviction. We are talking about admitting evidence of alleged acts for which a prior conviction may not even have been possible (yet it is treated as a rape). In addition, we are not just talking about ANY prior alleged act; we are talking about supposed rape, and when the jury hears that the man did "it" before, they obviously will conclude that he disrespects women.
Anon states: "There where 30 individual claims of violence on the form she signed,her testimony in open court was that none of it happened,yet the judge claimed that " I should watch myself" because he would sign another ex-parte order upon request.
That was a total travesty and abuse of power in light of her total denial of the claim."
Anon further states: "The prosecutor volunteered on public funded time to defend her in the civil matter after the criminal charges where proved to be false."
*******************
She denied the 30 acts of violence, and the criminal charges against you were disproved.
Sounds like the Judge, D.A., etc. have some sort of conspiracy against you. Why do you suppose that is?
Was your wife admonished for all the lies?
There was no conspiracy against me personally no, and you marginalize my experience by making me out to be a conspiracy theorist.
No, it is just business as usual under VAWA fueled courtrooms.
Go sit in the courtrooms, and you will see any man is presumed guilty on DV or SA charges.
Wimmin always get their litigation free and the man always pays.
I suggest you get grounded in reality before you go spouting crazy stuff on the net.
No, my xgf did not suffer any castigation for her crimes,in fact she was encouraged to do more.
Yes, she called 18 months later and claimed to have been co-erced, but that is not grounds for forgiveness in my book.
I could have done 93 days on contempt, and I had done nothing.
Contempt it what gets men jailed, and it can mean anything you want it to mean..
You sound like a lawyer/lier/person profiting off of family misery..
I will also add: this is why men will not share their experiences of false accusations.
Keep silent or be demonized.
So it appears that excluding evidence of prior criminal convictions may actually contribute to the conviction of innocent people.
sooooooo......is that the logic behind rape shield laws?
If you KNOW whe lied about rape before...if you KNOW she sleeps with everyone in town...if you KNOW she had 6 different sperm samples in her pants....she MORE believeable?
The Devastating ... - Search and Download Papers - SSRN Home
ya okay my linking was worse then yours but that's besides the point-the point is that NO other crime allows this and somebody should challenge it cause it wouldn't hold up in federal court-i mean you can't have different standards 4 crimes when it comes 2 evidence-like i said before F*UCKING FEMINAZIS!!!!
By law, persons accused of sex crimes are afforded fewer rights than persons accused of other crimes
According to feminism and it's ilk/supporters; men do not deserve to have their rights recognized anywhere.
"So it appears that excluding evidence of prior criminal convictions may actually contribute to the conviction of innocent people."
Your reading comprehension sucks, or your ability to interpret the practical implications of such things does, either way, you got it wrong.
Were everything in the report you linked to the gospel truth, all it tells us is that regarding prior convictions, a savvy lawyer from either side could swing the jury his way.
I question the findings however, and like the good host of this site, also doubt the ability to generalize from these findings to rape cases specifically, which carry a unique stigma in our puritanical and woman-worshipping nation.
Are American lawyers going to correct this perversion of our court system..I doubt it. For they feed off the train wrecks by charging by the hour.
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