Sunday, February 9, 2014

The Right to End Rape

An issue that has been receiving nationwide media attention lately is sexual assault, and on college campuses in particular. I have always heard that when terrible things like this occur, you have to come forward and tell someone so that the culprit cannot walk free and potentially hurt someone else in the future. After going to a self-defense class with my advisory on Thursday my eyes were opened to the truth behind how the cases actually turn out when a man is charged with sexual assault.
As you can see from the bar graph above, in reality 97% of people charged with rape will walk free, and I'm guessing a lot more than 3% of those charged are guilty. This is because of the sad fact that when many women come forward, the authorities are not able to prosecute because of insufficient evidence. This lack of evidence is caused either by the girl waiting to long after the event, or the authorities not taking the proper precautions to preserve or collect the evidence.

There have been many questionable cases at certain universities in which the authorities may have purposely with-held evidence for periods of time or even knowingly failed to collect evidence in order to help the university in some way. One of the most well-known example of this is the sexual assault charge on the Florida State quarterback, Jameis Winston, that was dropped because of the authorities collecting insufficient evidence. Some believe it was purposeful because the star quarterback was probably bringing in millions of dollars for the school and it would benefit them greatly to drop the charge. You can read more about that here.

However, a more recent example is in the news as of this week and it features the story of Joanna Espinosa, who is attempting to convict her ex boyfriend of sexual assault. The authorities have been the opposite of cooperative seeing as when she reported it to the Edinburg Police Department near her Texas-Pan American campus this is how they responded, "they told her that her case would be difficult to prove and took her phone number. She never heard back from them." The authorities couldn't be bothered to even explore the possibility of Espinosa having a case. They wouldn't give her the time of day, let alone a simple phone call. In America today 1 in 5 girls will encounter sexual assault on their college campus, yet why are they treated like the suspect instead of the victim.
This is only one of many flaws in our justice system today and the fact that the justice system values money over the well-being of innocent girls like the victim of Winston shows that the flaw stems from greed. The justice system should value for once what is right instead of what pays and start living up to their expectation of being "just" and fair like their name would suggest.

3 comments:

  1. This is in interesting issue. I'm not sure what the solution would be though. Either there would have to be some piece of legislation passed in which the amount of evidence to convict a rape is lowered (I don't think this would be a good idea), or greater outreach to women would have to be established (good idea). I believe awareness ads targeted at women to encourage them to speak up and act quickly regarding rape would go a far way. Advertising in today's America has the ability to make a large impact regarding anything, really.

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  2. He talked her into having sex .... um okay .... If that's rape why don't we all just quit and become monks .... ps just because a woman is batshit crazy doesn't necessarily mean she warrants a national voice

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  3. He talked her into having sex .... um okay .... If that's rape why don't we all just quit and become monks .... ps just because a woman is batshit crazy doesn't necessarily mean she warrants a national voice

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