25
   

Hey, Can A Woman "Ask To Get Raped"?

 
 
mysteryman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 05:34 pm
@firefly,


Quote:
Someone impaired by drugs or alcohol cannot knowingly and cogently consent to sex--regardless of how the substances were ingested. Her mental status would not meet the legal standard for "consent".


That being the case, why aren't more women charged with rape?
After all, a man that's drunk cant consent either.
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 05:42 pm
@mysteryman,
Quote:
That being the case, why aren't more women charged with rape?

Duh...maybe because more rape complaints aren't being filed against them.

Overwhelmingly, sexual assaults, of all types, are committed by men.

How is the crime of "rape" defined in your state's sexual assault laws? Do you even know?
0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 06:46 pm
@mysteryman,
Quote:
That being the case, why aren't more women charged with rape?
After all, a man that's drunk cant consent either


Please do not confused Firefly with more then one dimensional thinking of men as sexual predators and women as poor defenseless victims.

All men desire sex with any women they can get their hands on so men can not be sexually assaulted at least by a woman.
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 06:50 pm
@BillRM,
Try looking at the title of this thread...it's about the rapes of women...

And, whether you like it or not, the overwhelming number of sexual assaults are committed by men. By men who think just like you...

http://curezone.com/upload/Blogs/Zoebess/head_up_ass.jpg

There is no justification for rape.
0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 06:59 pm
@mysteryman,
Talk about placing a burden on men as I assume the only way to be safe in a Firefly universe and made sure his female partner can consent to sex is going to a testing center and having her blood and urine tested and it might also be a good idea to have a mental health work up on her also.

Even to do that there would need to be legal standards of how must of any given drug or BAC level is too high to void female consent to having sex.

The idea that adults even when they are under the voluntary repeat voluntary influence still are responsible for their own damn actions from driving to having sex is a very foreign concept to Firefly.

But then all Firefly really wish to do is allow any woman that have any regret to having consensus sex to place her partner in prison at her whim.
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 07:01 pm
@BillRM,
Too dumb to understand the laws...

http://curezone.com/upload/Blogs/Zoebess/head_up_ass.jpg
0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 07:11 pm
@izzythepush,
Quote:
Have you thought of moving to Saudi Arabia?


I think you and Firefly view women in the same manner as those in Sauda Arabia not as adults who must bear the burden of their own poor judgment from time to time.

I am all for treating females citizens as adults and was for the ERA when it was trying to be pass in the US.

So given that you and Firefly do not consider women as adults, I was just picturing in your universe of child like women how we would need to deal with protecting them.

An you are right in a Firefly universe of predators males and defenseless females the Sauda Arabia model seem to be the way to go.
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 07:22 pm
@BillRM,
http://curezone.com/upload/Blogs/Zoebess/head_up_ass.jpg
0 Replies
 
panzade
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 07:23 pm
@mysteryman,
MM, women are charged with rape
Quote:
A Chicago woman was jailed after being accused of picking up a stranger in her car and forcing him to have sex with another woman in the back of the vehicle.

Cierra Ross, a 25-year-old resident of suburb Olympia Fields, was charged with armed robbery and sexual assault stemming from the alleged crime, according to DNA Info.


Men tend to avoid reporting rape .
Quote:
Female-on-male rape is "presumed to be greatly under-reported," writes Salon.
National studies report anywhere between 1.4 and 3 percent of men say they have been raped at some point, according to The New York Times.
Another one in 21 men "had been forced to penetrate an acquaintance or a partner, usually a woman; had been the victim of an attempt to force penetration; or had been made to receive oral sex," according to The Times.


But in any case this is all beside the point. What we're dealing with here is the problem of a rape culture that shifts the blame to the victim; whether it's a man or a woman.

That's the sum total of these 460 pages.
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 07:42 pm
@panzade,
Quote:
But in any case this is all beside the point. What we're dealing with here is the problem of a rape culture that shifts the blame to the victim; whether it's a man or a woman.


Sorry the problem is the redefining of rape away from having sex by force, or the threat of force or sexual acts on someone that is not aware of her/his surrounding not just being high due to her/his own actions.

Firefly wish to made it impossible for a man to go out partying with a date and to know one way or another if by some undefine standards if she, for whatever reason, have some regret afterward she can turn him into a legal rapist due to the invalid consent theory.

Only men in Utah who only date strict Mormon women could feel safe from being turn into a rapist at his date whim.
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 08:05 pm
@panzade,
Footnote on this so call rape culture claims the reported rapes are at somewhere around a 33 years low for the US.
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 08:44 pm
@BillRM,
Quote:
Firefly wish...

Firefly wishes only that current sexual assault laws be upheld and abided by...laws that have been on the books for some time now.

So, you're not arguing with me, you're disputing the sexual assault laws in effect in all 50 U.S. states, and in effect on several other continents. Stop addressing comments to me, I am only citing existing laws. Unfortunately, your ignorance of those laws prevents you from citing them verbatim, or even correctly interpreting them.

Most men do abide by those laws and, unlike you, they have no trouble understanding them.

Rape has not been "redefined". Its legal definition always hinged on "consent".

The law never considered whether the victim's intoxication was voluntary or not. That issue is irrelevant when considering whether a sexual assault is considered a rape.
Quote:
Seventy-two percent of victims of college rape were too intoxicated to consent, according to a 2004 report in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol....

"That’s not to say that alcohol or drinking causes rape. It doesn’t," said Lynn Phillips, a psychologist and professor at the University of Massachusetts who studies students and sexuality. "Somebody choosing to take advantage of somebody who’s drunk is what’s causing rape. Right? They choose to do that. They could choose not to."...

“We don’t do enough to teach young men that you can’t have sex with somebody who’s incapacitated,” Phillips told America Tonight
...
http://america.aljazeera.com/watch/shows/america-tonight/america-tonight-blog/2013/10/30/what-will-changetherapecultureoncampuses.html

Doesn't any of that penetrate your thick skull?

Women are being raped, while intoxicated and legally incapable of consenting, by men known to them, because those men choose to rape.

And, let's face it, you don't give a damn about that.



0 Replies
 
panzade
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 09:12 pm
@BillRM,
You're absolutely right.

The number of rapes reported has gone down over the last 30 years but don't forget; 60% of all rapes are not reported.

So there's a lot of work still left to be done

US Bureau of Justice statistics show that in 26% of all rapes, current or former intimate partners are to blame. 7% by a relative. 38% by a friend or acquaintance and only 26% by a stranger.

This points to the conclusion that men(who are responsible for 99% of all rapes) need to respect the boundaries that make up the inter-relationships between men and women
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 09:38 pm
@panzade,
Quote:
Men tend to avoid reporting rape .

That's very true, panzade.
Quote:
Against his will: Female-on-male rape
By Sarah LeTrent, CNN
October 10, 2013

(CNN) -- "Go back to sleep."

Groggy from a night of drinking, that's precisely what James Landrith did.

The next morning, Landrith -- who was 19 at the time -- woke up in a bed that he quickly realized was not his own. As his haze lifted, he recognized the woman who ordered him to sleep the night before as a friend of a friend.

He remembered she asked for a ride home after their mutual friend left the nightclub where they'd been partying. He remembered the woman was pregnant and bought him drinks as a thank you.

He remembered feeling disoriented, and her suggesting a motel room to sleep it off. He even remembered lying down with his pants on, uncomfortable taking them off in front of a stranger, only to awaken later and find the woman straddling him. What he didn't remember was saying "yes."

The morning after, that familiar voice told him that he could hurt the baby if he put up a fight. Then, he says, she forced herself on him again. A few minutes later it was over. One night in a motel twin bed turned into years of self-examination.

It took some time, and the help of a therapist, to get there: "I was finally able to call it what it was," he says

Landrith had been raped.

That was 1990. Since then, Landrith -- a former Marine based at Camp Lejeune -- has spoken out on behalf of sexual assault victims, in particular men who were victimized by women. He didn't seek prosecution of his alleged rapist, but he wants other victims to feel free to talk about sexual assault and pursue justice without shame.

"I want people to understand that it's not about how physically strong you are," he says. "We [men] are conditioned to believe that we cannot be victimized in such a way."

According to a 2010 report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 1 in 5 women and 1 in 71 men in the United States have been raped. The actual number is likely higher, experts say, as incidents of sexual violence are severely underreported in the United States -- particularly among male victims.

Experts say any sexual assault victim requires extensive emotional and psychological healing after the incident, but male survivors have a harder time putting words to what happened.

In 2012, the FBI's Uniform Crime Report made a significant stride by redefining rape as: "The penetration, no matter how slight, of the vagina or anus with any body part or object, or oral penetration by a sex organ of another person, without the consent of the victim."

The prior definition -- "the carnal knowledge of a female, forcibly and against her will" -- hadn't been changed since 1927, and sexual assault awareness groups say it alienated victims that didn't fit the mold.

Veteran confronts rape, suicide: 'I am angry that others are going through this'

"Often, male survivors may be less likely to identify what happened to them as abuse or assault because of the general notion that men always want sex," says Jennifer Marsh, the vice president for Victim Services at RAINN, an anti-sexual violence organization.

"Males have the added burden of facing a society that doesn't believe rape can happen to them ... at all," says psychotherapist Elizabeth Donovan.

She says gender roles dictate that males are expected to be strong and self-reliant -- men are viewed as those who seek sexual conquests instead of those who "fend them off."

The concept of female-on-male sexual assault has recently gained traction on the Web via the ever-provocative entertainer Chris Brown. Brown recently revealed shocking details to Decca Aitkenhead in the Guardian about his first sexual encounter.

"He lost his virginity when he was 8 years old, to a local girl who was 14 or 15. Seriously? 'Yeah, really. Uh-huh.' He grins and chuckles. 'It's different in the country.' "

Tom Hawking of FlavorWire is one of many writers who took umbrage with this particular anecdote, asking in an article, "Why Is No One Talking About the Fact That Chris Brown Was Raped?"

Trauma recovery counselor Stephanie Baird says men who experience sexual attention as children, as Brown did, often explain it to themselves as "I'm a stud, I got laid by ..."

"They do this in order to feel as if they had some power and say," she says.

In addition to this macho posturing, there's also the hot-for-teacher or -babysitter complex that is a popular motif in modern American culture.

"Because of the culture of 'Mrs. Robinson' it can be much more difficult for a male to even recognize that the action is abusive or without consent," Baird says.

Consent, she says, means "being of age, mind, sound body to make an informed decision about whether one would like to become sexually intimate with the other person." Children cannot consent.

The chatter over Brown comes in tandem with recent research published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics that says nearly 1 in 10 youths between 14 and 21 years old have reported perpetrating some type of sexual violence in their lifetime.

The study also found that males and females carried out sexual violence at strikingly similar rates after the age of 18 -- 52% of males and 48% of females. The study classified sexual violence into a few categories: foresexual or presexual contact (kissing, touching, etc. against their will), coercive sex, attempted rape, and completed rape. Women were more likely to instigate unwanted foresexual contact.

For male sexual assault victims of any age, convincing others that they've been preyed upon is difficult as well. Experts say the general disparity in physical strength comes into play -- can't a man fight off a woman?

"It's a tough call; people think men can't be raped and they don't understand that in the confusion no still means no," says Curtis St. John, a representative for MaleSurvivor, a national support group for male sexual victimization.

Further muddying the water is the fact that some men can perform sexually, even including orgasm, and still be raped.

In an article in the Journal of Clinical Forensic Medicine, Roy J. Levin and Willy Van Berlo found that even in men who have not consented to sex, slight stimulation of the genitals or an increase in stress can create erections "even though no specific sexual stimulation is present."

" 'Were you aroused?' " is a question posed to male victims, St. John says. "You don't hear it with female rape victims. It's an interesting question that men get asked."

Long-term effects of being sexually assaulted can include post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance abuse, avoidance of intimacy or the stark opposite -- hyper-sexuality, says St. John.

"Some men feel a need to prove their masculinity by becoming hyper-masculine," Donovan says.

As for coping, Marsh at RAINN says it's never too late to reach out for help. But with the stigma attached, survivors may not feel comfortable talking to their friends and family because the victims themselves haven't defined their experience as assault.

For Landrith, it starts with confronting rape for what it is and sharing experiences.

"Whenever you talk about male survivors, women have it statistically worse, but it's not a competition -- and we each need our time to talk about it," he says.
http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/09/living/chris-brown-female-on-male-rape/


Quote:
But in any case this is all beside the point. What we're dealing with here is the problem of a rape culture that shifts the blame to the victim; whether it's a man or a woman.

And an asshole, like BillRM, would likely blame the male victim in this article, just as he blames female victims. It's the guy's own fault, he got drunk voluntarily, with someone he didn't know well and should not have trusted, etc. Are women expected to be the "guardians" of men when they get drunk? Do men need to be regarded, and treated, like children, rather than adults who are responsible for themselves, etc. How was the woman supposed to know he wasn't consenting? Maybe he did consent, but regretted his actions the next day, and he's claiming rape due to "a theory of invalid consent", etc.

That's good old BillRM.

As you said, panzade...
Quote:
What we're dealing with here is the problem of a rape culture that shifts the blame to the victim; whether it's a man or a woman.

And it's people like BillRM who promote and enable that rape culture, through victim blame, and who make it more difficult for victims, of either gender, to report their sexual assaults, and who make it easier for rapists to commit such acts with impunity.

There is no justification for rape.

The only one to blame for the crime of rape is the rapist.
Quote:
The number of rapes reported has gone down over the last 30 years...

While that might be true, it's of little comfort to all of those people who are sexually assaulted, and the statistics are somewhat misleading.

Rape is hardly a statistically insignificant crime. It's another of BillRM's attempts to deny the reality of rape.

0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 09:51 pm
@panzade,
An women should be punish severely when it is found that they had falsely charge someone with rape in order to get back at someone or for other reasons. Such as the dancer/hooker who turn three college guys lives upside down by falsely claiming that she was gang rape by them at a party and then allowed to walk free afterward with no punishment.

An games should not be play with the criminal justice system to redefine rape as when a woman regret an act of sexual intercourse after the fact as in the west point cadet who found himself charge with raping a woman who had jumped into a bed that he was sleeping in and begin the sexual acts and it somehow became a charge of rape due to her claims of invalid consent due to her drinking at the party while he was sleeping!!!!!!!

I am all for hanging rapists but I am also am just as for hanging women who ruin men lives for such reasons as explaining why they are pregnancy to a boyfriend who can not father children or why they are in a sex video to their parents.
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Wed 30 Oct, 2013 10:39 pm
@BillRM,
Quote:
An women should be punish severely when it is found that they had falsely charge someone with rape in order to get back at someone or for other reasons. Such as the dancer/hooker who turn three college guys lives upside down by falsely claiming that she was gang rape by them at a party and then allowed to walk free afterward with no punishment.

You really should stop citing the Duke rape case, you don't understand the facts, and each time you allude to it, you only flaunt your ignorance.

The issue in the Duke case was prosecutorial misconduct. The D.A. was disbarred because of that. The unfortunate woman involved was severely emotionally disturbed, and not malicious, and the Duke players have said they harbor her no ill will, they realize she was used by the D.A., and they did not want to see her punished. You should really follow their lead.

And that West Point cadet should not have allowed that woman into his bed under any circumstances, it was against the code of conduct. He should have gotten out of bed and reported her. Again, your ignorance is on display.

Since the inception of this thread, you have tried to derail discussion of actual crimes of rape/sexual assault by harping on instances of false allegations. That there may be false allegations, as is the case with all crimes, does not change the fact that real rapes occur and these sexual assaults destroy lives.

You cannot equate a deliberately false report with an actual rape. To do so, only indicates you really don't understand the profound physical and emotional violation involved in rape.

In addition, just because a prosecution does not occur, or a conviction does not result, does not mean that the allegation was intentionally, and deliberately, either false or malicious.

The punishment for deliberately filing a false police report reflects the fact that it is a crime against law enforcement--it needlessly ties up their resources and the resources of the criminal justice system. The recourse for someone who is falsely accused is in civil court--exactly the same remedy for any other act of slander or libel that damages one's reputation.
Quote:
I am all for hanging rapists but I am also am just as for hanging women who ruin men lives...

If you don't like the remedies, or punishments, for filing deliberately false reports of rape/sexual assault, or false reports for any other crime, start your own thread to discuss that topic. That is not what this thread is about.














0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Thu 31 Oct, 2013 05:09 am
The below video is the kind of nonsense that men need to put up with and fear be they cops or not. Take note of what a smooth and believable liar the lady happen to be.



The legal punishment for women falsely charging rape or sexual assault should be at the same level as for the crime of rape itself not only for the benefits of men but for the benefits of women who are real victims of sexual assaults.

Of course not too surprising, at least to me, Firefly had stated that she is happy with the minor slaps on the wrist at most that these women received for a crime that is every bit as evil as rape in my opinion.

Firefly had also stated somewhere on this thread that well it not the women responsibilities when men are falsely charge with rapes but the government for believing them!!!!!!!!

0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Thu 31 Oct, 2013 05:28 am
Once more but for a video five men could now be in prison for many decades for a crime that they did not do.

The state had yet, as of the time of the story, to decide if they are going to charge her or not for a crime that could had ended up with innocent men in prison for decades!!!!!!!!

Quote:
"Her actions and demeanor depict a very troubled young woman in need of much help," the prosecutor said.


If so very nice that the DA have express such concerns for this troubled young woman and I am sure he show the same concerns for trouble young me who are rapists as her crime is no less or more evil and harmful then those of rapists.

Below is the complete story.

Quote:
MINEOLA, N.Y. (CBS/AP) She was a Hofstra University freshman who had claimed she was raped by five men in a dormitory bathroom, but she has now changed her story after prosecutors confronted her with the revelation that a video of the encounter may have been recorded, a prosecutor said Thursday.

The recantation on Wednesday night led to the immediate release of four men, including one student at the Long Island college, who had been arrested on rape and other charges. Police had been seeking to arrest a fifth man when the charges were dropped.

The sex did occur in a bathroom but was consensual, a prosecutor said. Authorities could decide within weeks whether to charge the 18-year-old woman for making up the story.

Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice said Thursday that the woman, whom she would not identify, was interviewed Wednesday night by two senior prosecutors as a routine part of a follow-up investigation.

The woman first told police she was lured to the dormitory and raped early Sunday after her cell phone was stolen by a man she had met at a dance party, Rice said. She said she was bound with rope while the five men took turns sexually assaulting her in a men's bathroom stall.

Almost immediately, Rice said, the woman's story began to unravel with "significant inconsistencies," but she declined to elaborate. "The turning point was when she was confronted with the fact that there may exist a video of some or all of the incident," Rice said.

"Her actions and demeanor depict a very troubled young woman in need of much help," the prosecutor said.

An attorney for one of the accused men, 20-year-old Kevin Taveras, said he was shown a copy of the cell phone video and said it confirmed reports that the woman was not attacked.

"It looks more like a porn movie," Victor Daly-Rivera said. "It showed just the opposite of what the allegations were. There was no tying up, there was no bruising, there was no screaming."

The four young men who were falsly accused say the experience was traumatizing.

"I was really scared. I couldn't believe what was basically going through my mind. It was like a big nightmare, and I thought I was going to do time for something I didn't do," 20-year-old Kevin Taveras said on Headline News network's "Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell" on Friday, Sept. 18.

The woman who filed the accusation has been suspended from school until a disciplinary hearing is held, a Hofstra spokeswoman said. Melissa Connolly also said a suspension against Rondell Bedward, the only Hofstra student among the five men implicated, had been lifted.

Two of the men who were released said outside the Nassau County jail on Wednesday night that said they had feared the possibility of serving 25 years to life for a felony rape conviction.

"It's crazy; the system is supposed to prevent these things from happening," Taveras said outside the jail late Wednesday.

"It's supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, not guilty until proven innocent," he said. "Inside I thought I was going to do a bit for something I didn't do."

Bedward, 21, declined to comment after he was released.

On campus, students shook their heads at the latest twist in the case.

"It's definitely a shock," said Megan Michler, a junior from Penargyl, Pa. "I guess she completely lied about it and it's not fair to the guys that were involved. Everyone was shaken up by the whole thing, and now we were shaken up for nothing."

Hofstra, a private university of 12,600 students, played host to the final presidential debate of the 2008 election.

The rape report "just really gave the university a bad name," said Dani Frank, a print journalism major from Easton, Conn. "I really wish there hadn't been conclusions jumped to because it put the boys in a negative light, it put Hofstra in a negative light, and people will give her a lot less credibility in the future."


firefly
 
  1  
Reply Thu 31 Oct, 2013 10:26 am
@BillRM,
I repeat what I said before...

Since the inception of this thread, you have tried to derail discussion of actual crimes of rape/sexual assault by harping on instances of false allegations. That there may be false allegations, as is the case with all crimes, does not change the fact that real rapes occur and these sexual assaults destroy lives.

You cannot equate a deliberately false report with an actual rape. To do so only indicates you really don't understand the profound physical and emotional violation involved in rape.

The punishment for deliberately filing a false police report reflects the fact that it is a crime against law enforcement--it needlessly ties up their resources and the resources of the criminal justice system. The recourse for someone who is falsely accused is in civil court--exactly the same remedy for any other act of slander or libel that damages one's reputation.

If you don't like the remedies, or punishments, for filing deliberately false reports of rape/sexual assault, or false reports for any other crime, start your own thread to discuss that topic. That is not what this thread is about.

Throughout hundreds of pages of this thread, you have engaged in every possible tactic to deny, minimize, excuse, and rationalize, crimes of rape/sexual assault, and when actual rape victims posted in this thread, and related their experiences, you demeaned and insulted them.

Your particular personal obsession with the issue of false allegations reveals a rather profound distrust of women on your part. That basic attitude, coupled with a fair amount of hostility and derision toward women in general, and toward many of the female posters in this thread in particular, has characterized most of your comments in this thread.

You seem to be on a one man mission to discredit women, and their claims of sexual assault, in every possible way. That mind-set, coupled with your general mockery of the issue of sexual assault, is not only part of what contributes to facilitating a "rape culture", it actually trivializes the problem of false allegations because your presentation is so clearly skewed and biased, quite often inaccurate, and because you choose to present it in the wrong context. You ironically wind up being the worse possible spokesperson for your cause.

The one thing you have not done, in the hundreds of pages of this thread, is to acknowledge that there is never justification for rape, rape as the laws currently, and rather universally, define it, and that there is a need to change those attitudes that help to facilitate sexual assaults.

All you've really done in this thread is to, once again, cement your reputation for being an asshole--as if any more proof of that was needed.



0 Replies
 
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Thu 31 Oct, 2013 11:37 am
Love that once more a woman get a slap on the wrist of 20 days in jail for falsely charging a man with the worst moral crime that a man can face other then child molesting.

Only a video save this man from perhaps decades in prison or at best being found not guilt and having the Fireflies of the world stating that they do not care about the jury verdict he must be guilt.

Thank god that I am out of the dating game with all the risks that a man face every time he is along with a woman with or without sexual relationships happening.




Quote:
A Valparaiso woman who the Porter County Sheriff’s Police said falsely accused a man of raping her has been sentenced to 180 days in jail after pleading guilty to a charge of false reporting.

Erica Donohue, 20, of 1209 1/2 Chicago St., was sentenced to 180 days in jail, with all but 20 days in jail and 10 days of community service suspended, police said.

According to police, on July 15 Donohue reported being raped by an acquaintance of hers in rural Porter County.

Det. Gene Hopkins of the PCSP subsequently undertook an “extensive investigation,” on the basis of which the Prosecuting Attorney’s Office issued a warrant not for the man’s arrest but Donohue’s,” police said.

Donohue was arrested on Sept. 29. “During the following interview, Donohue admitted to not being raped and fabricated the rape accusation to conceal her whereabouts from an individual with whom Donohue was having a relationship,” police said. “A consensual video of the incident had been discovered during the investigation.”

Link: http://www.chestertontribune.com/PoliceFireEmergency/101592%20valpo_woman_sentenced_after_plea.htm

 

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