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The rape charge as weapon
By Cathy Young | May 1, 2006
THE NOTORIOUS case of alleged rape at Duke University has
an explosive mix of elements: gender, race, class, and charges
of sexual violence. Three members of the school's lacrosse
team, privileged young white men, are accused of sexually
assaulting a stripper who is African-American.
The facts of the case remain murky. According to media reports,
medical evidence seems to support the woman's claim of sexual
assault, but no DNA match to any team members has been found,
and two of the accused may have an alibi. The police report
suggests that the woman was initially picked up when heavily
intoxicated. The other exotic dancer who was on the scene
initially disputed the alleged victim's claims but then changed
her story somewhat, and apparently made inquiries about profiting
from her role in the case.
In the current trial by media, charges of a rush to judgment
abound. Women's advocates and many others claim that the
alleged victim is being smeared as a slut by a sexist culture
which holds that an ''unchaste" woman who is raped must have
been ''asking for it." (Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh
charmingly referred to charges that lacrosse team members
had ''raped some hos.")
Meanwhile, some say that the quick assumption that the players
are guilty reflects antimale prejudice. Writes columnist
Kathleen Parker, ''Reaction to Duke's sad chapter is but
the inevitable full flowering of the antimale seeds planted
a generation ago. Thus, we need little prompting to assume
that where there's a guy, there's a potential rapist."
Feminism has achieved real and important progress in the
treatment of sexual assault victims. A couple of generations
ago, a stripper at a party with athletes would have been
viewed by many as fair game. That this is no longer the case
surely makes us a more decent society.
But even some people who applaud this change believe that
in some cases, the pendulum has swung too far. Many feminists
seem to think that in sexual assault cases the presumption
of innocence should not apply. Appearing on the Fox News
show ''The O'Reilly Factor," Monika Johnson-Hostler of the
North Carolina Coalition Against Sexual Assault declared
that her role was ''to support a woman or any victim that
comes forward to say that they were sexually assaulted."
To O'Reilly's question, ''Even if they weren't?" Johnson-Hostler
replied, ''I can't say that I've come across one that wasn't." Feminist
pundits discussing this case, such as Wendy Murphy of the
New England School of Law, exude an overwhelming presumption
of guilt.
In some cases, activists have even protested what they believe
is excessive coverage of false accusations of rape and innocently
accused men.
False charges do exist. FBI statistics show that about 9
percent of rape reports are ''unfounded" -- dismissed without
charges being filed. This usually happens when the accuser
recants or when her story is not just unsupported but contradicted
by evidence. Some studies, including one by pioneering date
rape researcher Eugene Kanin, put the rate of false accusations
at one in four or even higher.
The results can be devastating. In 1996, Los Angeles police
officer Harris Scott Mintz was accused of rape by a woman
in the neighborhood he patrolled, and then by his own wife
as well. At a pretrial hearing, the judge pronounced that
he had no doubt about Mintz's guilt. Then, his wife admitted
that she made up the charge because she was angry at her
husband for getting in trouble with the law; subsequently,
Mintz's attorneys uncovered evidence that the first accuser
had told an ex-roommate she had concocted the rape charge
in order to sue the county and that she had tried a similar
hoax before. By the time the case collapsed, Mintz had spent
five months in jail.
To recognize that some women wrongly accuse men of rape
is not antifemale, any more than recognizing that some men
rape women is antimale. Is it so unreasonable to think that
a uniquely damaging charge will be used by some people as
a weapon, just as others will use their muscle? Do we really
believe that when women have power -- and there is power
in an accusation of rape -- they are less likely to abuse
it than men? As Columbia University law professor George
Fletcher has written, ''It is important to defend the interests
of women as victims, but not to go so far as to accord women
complaining of rape a presumption of honesty and objectivity."
If that's the lesson of the Duke case, then some good will
have come of it after all.
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