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niyad

(120,693 posts)
Thu Dec 22, 2016, 12:37 PM Dec 2016

A Judge on Trial (stanford rape judge persky)

A Judge on Trial



On June 2, a young woman stood up during a sentencing hearing at a Santa Clara County Superior Court to read from a 7,000-word impact statement. “I wanted to take off my body like a jacket,” she told her attacker, Brock Turner, convicted of three counts of felony sexual assault following a three-week jury trial in March. “You took away my worth, my privacy, my energy, my time, my safety, my intimacy, my confidence, my own voice, until today.” The woman’s remarks were directed at Turner, but her words traveled far beyond the walls of the California courtroom. Her statement went viral, millions were moved by it, and Vice President Joe Biden penned an emotional response. But her powerful testimonial failed to rouse one crucial listener: Aaron Persky, the judge presiding over what the media dubbed the “Stanford Rape Case.”



Despite the prosecution’s request for a six-year prison term and despite the state’s mandatory minimum two-year sentencing requirement for assault with attempt to commit rape, Judge Persky chose to utilize a (since closed) loophole in California law. Persky deemed Turner’s “an unusual case,” citing the former Stanford University swimmer’s youth, previously high record of achievement and lack of prior criminal record, along with his high level of intoxication at the time he committed his crime. Turner, then 20, was sentenced to six months in jail, followed by three years’ probation and registration on the sex offender list. In his remarks to the court, Persky noted the “severe impact” he believed a prison sentence would have on Turner, coupled with the “adverse collateral consequences” Turner would face as a result of the felony conviction.

. . . . .

“This was not an isolated decision,” Dauber stressed at a recall event in Palo Alto organized by prominent Silicon Valley feminists. Persky, a former criminal prosecutor who himself received a bachelor’s degree from Stanford and served as captain of the lacrosse team, has exhibited “a pattern of bias in favor of privileged [defendants who are] white, highly educated, upper class [or] athletes…accused of violence against women.” In Persky’s courtroom, a Cisco engineer pleaded no contest to severely beating his fiancée and received weekend jail time to ensure he would not incur absences from work. A plumber convicted of possessing “highly disturbing” images of child pornography depicting young and infant girls was invited to return to court to have his sentence reduced to a misdemeanor. A man who pleaded no contest to beating and choking a former girlfriend had his sentencing delayed for several months to allow him to play football at the University of Hawaii. In August, news broke of the arrest of this same, now former, UH football player on separate charges of domestic violence in Washington state.

Armed with a robust and growing portfolio of bias in Persky’s decisions, Dauber and her team are prepared to present their case to the voters of Santa Clara County.In recent days, this effort has been underscored after California’s Commission on Judicial Performance cleared Persky of all charges of misconduct related to the Turner sentencing. “We believe that the record is completely clear that Judge Persky has a long record of failing to take violence against women seriously,” the campaign said in a media statement, “and we will demonstrate when we launch the campaign early next year.A biased judge is a threat to the entire legal system,” Dauber told supporters in the fall. “[It] destroys the trust of the people and the fairness of the process.”

. . . . .



The recall of one judge cannot obliterate legal bias against women, but it can send an unequivocal message to courts and to law enforcement that they will be held accountable for whose side they take in the fight against sexual assault. That day in June, the young woman concluded her statement with a message to other survivors. “To girls everywhere,” she said, “I am with you.”

http://msmagazine.com/blog/2016/12/21/a-judge-on-trial/

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