Thursday 6 February 2014

The Rape of Justice

Just as there must be no reversal of the burden of proof or abolition of the right to conduct one’s own defence in rape cases, changes frequently demanded by certain campaigners, so there must be no extension of anonymity to adult defendants.

Rather, there should be no anonymity for adult accusers, either. We either have an open system of justice, or we do not.

The specific offence of rape serves only to keep on the streets people who should certainly be taken out of circulation.

Instead, we need to replace the offences of rape, serious sexual assault and indecent assault with an aggravating circumstance to the ordinary categories of assault, enabling the maximum sentences to be doubled.

That way, those poor women with broken bones and worse, whose assailants were never convicted of anything, really would have received justice.

But can anyone explain to me how the conviction rate for rape is demonstrably wrong? What, exactly, would be the correct rate? And why, exactly?

That a woman has had a most unpleasant experience of this kind, the far greater likelihood of which is a direct consequence of the unquestionable Sexual Revolution, does not necessarily mean that she has experienced the offence of rape as the law defines it.

Either that, or the real scandal is that there are so few prosecutions for what is clearly very widespread perjury, attempting to pervert the course of justice, and making false statements to the Police.

Not that those two possibilities are mutually exclusive.

6 comments:

  1. If accusers don't have anonymity, many would be too scared to come forward.

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  2. If that does not apply to everything else, then it certainly does not apply to this.

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  3. You don't think some women may be scared to publicly identify their attackers?

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  4. So might victims of anything else.

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  5. You clearly have no concern for victims of rape, a specially horrific crime.

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