Well, then I let you keep hoping that there was a rape. If you are so happy with that.
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Well, then I let you keep hoping that there was a rape. If you are so happy with that.
Again with the language barrier? :confused:
Yes, there are false accusations, just as there are false prosecutions and false verdicts. Use of DNA has helped criminologists in general, especially with sex crimes. That means the falsely accused can be exonerated easier now than ever before (when DNA is present).
Most cases with wrong accusation I know of have been between people that know eachother. There have been some "I was raped at that place by a unknown" kind of accusations that I know of which where proven to be wrong afterwards, but those a rare.
I think the DSK case is not typical, it is more common to have women who (wrongly) claim to be raped by their husbands to get a better position for a divorce. DNA doesn't help a lot in this case. If you look at the whole Kachelmann case you see that it is much harder to prove anything in those cases. This goes the other way around too, it is almost impossible to prove if a specific intercourse of a couple was consentient or not.
Well, for someone with my line of work (you know where people try to make me believe their sob stories on a daily basis, and where many people would be willing to lie untill their tongue turns black because the stakes are so high for them) you get to pick up on little things that don't match. Like the brother going on record that his sister is this sweet pious muslim woman trying to make an honest living whose first thought is to call in a lawyer after she supposedly has been raped.
And of course now we'll get our 'she must have been raped' advocate GGT that this is perfectly normal behaviour for a rape victim, but it simply IS NOT for a woman with THAT background.
:rolleyes: Let me get this straight. Your new tactic is criticizing the US legal system based on your line of work of adjudicating disability claims? Because you're given the authority as 'judge' for public funds....you think the US police and DA's should do the same with regards to criminal complaints and felony charges?
No you idiot, what I am saying is that it is not so hard to see holes in people's stories.
You did a lot of name calling through the whole thread.
Aha, telling someone to be "full of shit" is not name calling? I mean, what is this, some kind of semantic difference?
Apparently, yes. Calling bullshit on a poster is not the same as saying, "You idiot" or "You're an idiot".
Edit to EJ: I've sometimes had trouble translating what you say, obviously because English isn't your first language. So I'll give you a tip about English "slang": Bullshit is hot air, a bluff, excuse, or a distraction. Being full of shit is being full of hot air, bluffs, excuses, or distractions. Idiots can't really be bullshitters, because they're too dumb to have any ulterior motive. Bullshitters can play poker and win, but idiots can't.
Does that make sense?
But you didn't say bullshit, you said 'you are full of shit'.
:haha: Yeah, that means "you are full of hot air".
Full of shit means bullshit, which also means bull, which also means baloney. (Pronounced bull-o-nee) ;)
Technically, it's bologna. That's end scraps and crappy cuts of meat mixed and shaped into a ring and sliced in order to be edible. See the metaphor?
A relationship does not imply a sexual one. He could have been a relative, a friend, whatever, and AFAIK that's not a problem for a religious Muslim woman (otherwise some of my friends have some 'splaining to do).
Also, really? 'Gangsta ho' is simply poor taste.
Since when were these character problems clear by the bail hearing? Certainly nothing was publicly known by then, and yet you were quite happy to jump to an unfounded conclusion.Quote:
Within days the character 'problem' was clear, still the DA's office went for bail conditions as they were set. Bail conditions that were considered too heavy when the background was introduced in court. You can try bringing up France's record on extradition, but that didn't seem to be a problem for the judge who set the present bail conditions. Conditions which would have been appropriate 6 weeks ago just as much as they were last friday.
*shrugs* I'm not too exercised about this - he always had the option of staying in jail for free, and he was a legitimate flight risk.Quote:
Dragging him to prison, then putting him under severe house arrest - for which he had to pay thousands upon thousands - inflicted damages on him which are totally not reconcilable with his innocent status. If this is how you treat your suspects there is something seriously wrong with your system since it starts retribution well before a person is convicted.
Yes. That's what semantics means. Do you have another question or comment for me, or can we move along, EJ?
There were and will be wrong accusations. We need to be able to handle them, this case won't change that fact.
What should be result from the case, is not to take rape accusations less serious, but that "innocent until proven guilty" are not just some empty words, but a crucial part of both western (continental and Anglo-Saxon) judicial systems.
Are you going to bring up one non-sequitur after another?
Yeah I got a LoL response :cheerleader:
He was her boyfriend. The call was known to the DA's office within days of the arrest. All they needed to do was ask her 'hey who's this guy in prison you were calling the other day?Not more so than calling a serial liar a 'pious muslim'.Quote:
Also, really? 'Gangsta ho' is simply poor taste.
I never claimed absolute knowledge of what happened. I just said the whole thing smelled fishy. What is worse is that the DA's office knew within a few days that her story was indeed smelly and didn't act upon it. Quite to the contrary they stuck to the line that this woman was credible, which was already disproven by then. They had no reason to demand the conditions for bail they demanded, yet they did as if it was a given that DSK would be convicted. They could also have taken away his passport, which then would have made it near impossible for him to leave the country.Quote:
Since when were these character problems clear by the bail hearing? Certainly nothing was publicly known by then, and yet you were quite happy to jump to an unfounded conclusion.
Yeah, he could have stayed in prison, which also is not the place where an innocent person should be. Interesting that you don't have any problems with that either.Quote:
*shrugs* I'm not too exercised about this - he always had the option of staying in jail for free, and he was a legitimate flight risk.
Maybe they did, and maybe she - *gasp* - lied.
No one did, though. They called someone who identified as a religious Muslim what she said she was.Quote:
Not more so than calling a serial liar a 'pious muslim'.
Bulllshit. For one, you had no a priori reason to doubt the story. For another, you have yet to justify your claim that the DA knew 'within days' that her story was unlikely to produce a conviction. Pretty much as soon as they had the translation of the phone call, the prosecutors changed their story. Seems reasonable enough.Quote:
I never claimed absolute knowledge of what happened. I just said the whole thing smelled fishy. What is worse is that the DA's office knew within a few days that her story was indeed smelly and didn't act upon it. Quite to the contrary they stuck to the line that this woman was credible, which was already disproven by then. They had no reason to demand the conditions for bail they demanded, yet they did as if it was a given that DSK would be convicted. They could also have taken away his passport, which then would have made it near impossible for him to leave the country.
It is the place an accused rapist should be, unless they can offer sureties (normally financial) that they won't fly the coop.Quote:
Yeah, he could have stayed in prison, which also is not the place where an innocent person should be. Interesting that you don't have any problems with that either.
Actually I don't have to justify anything as her story is not credible and my hunch was right. Your presumption of guilt on the other hand was not.
Speaking of liars... no one presumed Strauss-Kahn was guilty, in fact no one else except you presumed anything at all about this case, least of all wiggin who pointed out how ridiculous the thread and the poll are when none of us could possibly no what occurred in that hotel. It's only you who's insisted on trying to frame this whole thing as some kind of stupid 'did he, didn't he' discussion', as if anyone here could possibly know what really occurred in that hotel room.
Uhm, yes you do. You're complaining that the DA knew the case was falling apart even before the bail hearings, when AFAIK that's completely untrue. It's irrelevant if her credibility is questionable based on evidence they have now - what's relevant is whether your assumptions of her being a liar from the getgo are justified based on the evidence available at the time, and furthermore whether the DA's choice to pursue the case aggressively was justified based on the information they had at the time.
I'm not even going to address you going back to this ridiculous trope of a 'presumption of guilt'. My first post in this thread is me arguing against your entire way of thinking about this. This entire thread has been you making unsubstantiated claims and accusations while I and others ask you to provide evidence or backing for your outlandish statements.
Rubbish, the information about the phone call was given to the DA's office within days of it taking place. The bail hearings were 5 days after the accusation.
I can only laugh as with every little piece of information we get this whole affair is turning into what I though it was from the beginning. Some whore trying to take advantage of a rich customer.
Which makes it rather irrelevant if my claims were unsubstantiated; they have been falsified already. The problem is that you can't admit that with all your 'reasonable' arguments, you were still plain wrong.
Now GGT can hector on about how a whore can be a rape victim too.
This is ridiculous! Half a dozen people have already pointed out that the fact there was a phone call is not enough to derail the case, it's the content that was troubling.
Neither of us actually know what happened - let alone whether the woman in question was a 'whore'. What we know is that a conviction is unlikely due to questions about the credibility of the accuser. And IIRC you first opined this was a conspiracy to take DSK down before the elections, and only later decided it was a woman out for a civil settlement once it became clear that a sexual encounter had taken place.Quote:
I can only laugh as with every little piece of information we get this whole affair is turning into what I though it was from the beginning. Some whore trying to take advantage of a rich customer.
Uhm, it matters quite a bit. Unsubstantiated assumptions are a big problem here; in fact, it's the entire problem with this thread. Nearly everyone else here has argued that we should wait for the justice system to do its work, and it appears that it has.Quote:
Which makes it rather irrelevant if my claims were unsubstantiated; they have been falsified already.
Oh oh, all of a sudden we have a problem seeing what is being leaked by the investigation.
The justice system did not work, and you were wrong too. If the justice system would have worked DSK would not have spent days in prison or under house arrest. Sloppiness made that it took them 6 bloody weeks to draw the inevitable conclusion that there wasn't really such a strong case against him to start with. You were the one assuming that there was a reasonable case because you can't believe your legal system is so rotten that it would destroy the life of an innocent man.
But, whatever, you believe you live in a country with a legal system that stands for justice. The rest of the world knows a lot better.
P.S. I have never stated anything on the actual sex taking place. And I have still not seen anything convincing that it took place. I do consider it more likely now, given the fact that the accuser had two jobs.
Uhm, what?
Is it possible they could have expedited some of the investigation into the woman? Maybe, I don't know - but neither do you. I'd prefer they do a thorough job and be sure of it rather than dropping the case on the basis of a flimsy pretext. But whether he would be incarcerated/under house arrest for 3 weeks or 6 weeks, the outcome is largely the same. Nor is this conclusion somehow 'inevitable'.Quote:
The justice system did not work, and you were wrong too. If the justice system would have worked DSK would not have spent days in prison or under house arrest. Sloppiness made that it took them 6 bloody weeks to draw the inevitable conclusion that there wasn't really such a strong case against him to start with. You were the one assuming that there was a reasonable case because you can't believe your legal system is so rotten that it would destroy the life of an innocent man.
Please, I've acknowledged here and elsewhere that our justice system has plenty of flaws, as do most justice systems. But in this case it seems to have acted appropriately.Quote:
But, whatever, you believe you live in a country with a legal system that stands for justice. The rest of the world knows a lot better.
You're right, I brought up the sources that indicated there was clear evidence a sexual encounter had taken place, but it was around that time that you stopped pushing the 'conspiracy theory' side of things and instead started pushing the 'lying weasel out for money' side of things. I honestly don't know why you changed your tune.Quote:
P.S. I have never stated anything on the actual sex taking place. And I have still not seen anything convincing that it took place. I do consider it more likely now, given the fact that the accuser had two jobs.
The justice system appears to have worked as perfectly as possible.
I don't recall that comment and the search function, poor as it is, is not bringing it up for me. Lacking the context of the remark, I am hesitant to respond to it. Your comment was right in front of me, and perhaps most importantly, it was directed AT me, as it was regarding sentiments I held.
um, no you didn't. The fact that this woman has lied in the past doesn't mean she wasn't raped in this particular instance. The fact that she called her buddy in organized crime about making money out of it doesn't mean she wasn't raped either. Turns out, sometimes rapist rape women who aren't of unimpeachable moral character? All it means is that her testimony can't be relied upon, which isn't the same thing as proof she made the whole thing up to get money.
I don't know why you're so chuffed with yourself about this, to be honest. Even if you turn out to be right in the end all you've done is taken a guess that had a more or less 50% chance of being correct and got lucky. Meanwhile, your conduct in this thread and near overt misogyny reveals you to be generally despicable human being, but then anyone familiar with your posting history probably already knew that.
I never took the conspiracy theory very serious. But I did see a fascinating pattern evolving during the first days of the investigation.
As for my remarks about the American government not being above anything; that doesn't mean I thought they set him up with this whore, but it sure as hell doesn't exclude the possibility that they used it to their advantage.
Because you're a sad, pathetic little man who doesn't like to have it pointed out how utterly full of shit it he is literally all the time?