View Poll Results: Did DSK rape the chambermaid ?

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  • Yes

    1 20.00%
  • No

    4 80.00%
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Thread: So, did he or didn't he?

  1. #241
    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    In that context, I couldn't care less what it will do to his career.
    and this is the problem. Even if he is legally cleared, his personal and career life is fucked. Not much he can do about it either, its the fucked up way society works. These things hover over you for life, you're no longer as innocent as you used to be.

    I don't care who you are, or what you do. Its a dick thing to claim that its ok that someone's life is basically over as they know it because justice has to run its course to find someone innocent.

    Quote Originally Posted by GGT View Post
    Let's not confuse search engines with background checks. The Duke Lacrosse team is a particularly good example of how false accusations WILL eventually be proven and legally adjudicated.
    Do you think businesses don't run social checks? That lacrosse team is going to carry that event with them till the day they die. There is far more to life then the legal aspect. These people, and their history, thats a distraction thats going to be to great for some things.
    Just like the school teachers who are pushed out of the system after its discovered they did porn 15 some years ago.
    Last edited by Ominous Gamer; 05-26-2011 at 01:02 PM.
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  2. #242
    He may not be politically viable for public offices, but with his credentials and skills there are endless job opportunities for him within the least moral private industries, such as oil or manufacture and sale of weaponry.
    In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
    The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.

  3. #243
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    I would agree that not every scandal should automatically be discarded as a complot. You'd be indeed putting yourself in a corner where I don't care to be. Neither seeing the entire world as the playground of illuminati nor seeing 'the elite' incapable of doing bad things is my way of looking as things.

    Still, I can't help myself thinking in this particular case that this was really a convenient scandal to break. Too convenient? I don't really know.

    And of course this type of damage should not be a reason not to raise an accusation against the guilty. But I also think we should come down a lot harder on people who falsely accuse somebody, given the extensive damage this does and keeps doing. GGT is behaving like a stupid ass acting as if a not-guilty in court alone is enough to get back your life. All I need to do is point out how people think about the not-guilty verdict that came at the end of the case against O.J. Simpson. If there is anybody who truly believes he didn't do it, I still have to meet that person.
    It has already been suggested in this thread by Loki that the same could happen to DSK just because he can afford the best lawyers.

    All that given, I do believe that giving any sort of higher level of credence to a person who claims to be a rape victim gives the accused (especially the falsely accused) a deal way too bad to consider it justice.
    I'm the stupid ass here? You're the one who's already decided her accusations are false, maybe even a conspiracy. You're the one suggesting DSK should have special treatment because he's a VIP global banker/politician, and NYPD should be sensitive to his reputation and career. You're the one who's trashed the maid's character, without any evidence or proof, using just your "gut feeling". You're the one who immediately dismissed the notion of justice, or a fair trial, because it's in America. You're the one 'rushing to judgement' on all fronts, including DSK's future career.

    I've already said police detectives and DA have a duty to flush out false allegations and collect evidence, but it's not their job to act as judge and jury, or gag the press for what they print, or protect the accused from the media (unless they're a minor).

    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Wiggin, the only thing I was concerned with in my posts to GGT is her casual dismissal of the possible effects of a rape accusation on a person's life just because he happens to be rich and powerful. I certainly think that if there is cause to charge him then that's what should be done. I just don't like the way GGT and much of the media ignores the impact of these things. The innocent have nothing to fear etc.
    I'm not casually dismissing false accusations, or the damage they can do to innocent people. I'm being objective (and non-emotional) --- our legal system has some problems, but it also has recourse for the falsely accused. They can file civil counter-charges for libel or slander. Officials should be focused on collecting evidence and taking facts to court, where innuendo is flushed out; status and reputation of the accused shouldn't even be a factor.

  4. #244
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    Still, I can't help myself thinking in this particular case that this was really a convenient scandal to break. Too convenient? I don't really know.
    Still don't get this logic. It's irrelevant if it was convenient or not. It's likely that if this were to happen a few years earlier when he was in the running for the top IMF spot, people would say the same thing. Coincidences do not imply a vast right wing conspiracy.

    And of course this type of damage should not be a reason not to raise an accusation against the guilty. But I also think we should come down a lot harder on people who falsely accuse somebody, given the extensive damage this does and keeps doing. GGT is behaving like a stupid ass acting as if a not-guilty in court alone is enough to get back your life. All I need to do is point out how people think about the not-guilty verdict that came at the end of the case against O.J. Simpson. If there is anybody who truly believes he didn't do it, I still have to meet that person.
    It has already been suggested in this thread by Loki that the same could happen to DSK just because he can afford the best lawyers.
    This is probably the first reasonable thing you've said in this thread. I agree, mostly - false accusations (however uncommon) do need to be appropriately punished. (And GGT is wrong on this one.)

    All that given, I do believe that giving any sort of higher level of credence to a person who claims to be a rape victim gives the accused (especially the falsely accused) a deal way too bad to consider it justice.
    This I'm not so much in agreement with. By your own sources, there's somewhere between a 98 and 92% chance that a given rape accusation is real (and some ridiculous number of rapes are never even reported, to boot). Given the large societal stigma attached to being a rape victim, it's not unreasonable to make a culture of immediate acceptance of accusations (but NOT guilt) rather than default skepticism - otherwise, you have a decent chance of scaring away a lot of legitimate accusations to protect a proportionally smaller population from embarrassment and scandal.

    While I don't want to disincentivize rape reporting any more than it already is, I do think we should disincentivize fabricated accusations as above. Some stricter punishment regime is not uncalled for.

    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Wiggin, the only thing I was concerned with in my posts to GGT is her casual dismissal of the possible effects of a rape accusation on a person's life just because he happens to be rich and powerful. I certainly think that if there is cause to charge him then that's what should be done. I just don't like the way GGT and much of the media ignores the impact of these things. The innocent have nothing to fear etc.
    Okay, fair enough, I agree GGT was unreasonable.

    Quote Originally Posted by OG
    and this is the problem. Even if he is legally cleared, his personal and career life is fucked. Not much he can do about it either, its the fucked up way society works. These things hover over you for life, you're no longer as innocent as you used to be.

    I don't care who you are, or what you do. Its a dick thing to claim that its ok that someone's life is basically over as they know it because justice has to run its course to find someone innocent.
    As above, I don't really agree. I don't see a viable alternative other than taking rape accusations very seriously, and vigorously prosecuting cases with enough evidence. In that context, it's regrettable that the occasional accusation is a fabrication, and we should try to discourage such behavior - but I don't think we should pursue such accusations less forcefully because of this small chance.

    It's not 'OK' that some people's public lives are ruined by such false accusations, but it's very much more not 'OK' for rapes to go underreported and unpunished because the accusation is met with a collective yawn on the part of law enforcement and our justice system.

  5. #245
    Out of curiosity, what would be a sensible way to deal with 1. false rape accusations and 2. ones that don't end with a conviction, due to insufficient evidence?
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  6. #246
    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Out of curiosity, what would be a sensible way to deal with 1. false rape accusations and 2. ones that don't end with a conviction, due to insufficient evidence?
    See that's a problem, because that's not a LEGAL distinction. The only legal standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt." Insufficient evidence is a prosecutorial determination made in advance of laying charges. The jury's deliberations are secret and with good reason, and they can find reasonable doubt from any number of valid *or invalid* factors.
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  7. #247
    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Out of curiosity, what would be a sensible way to deal with 1. false rape accusations and 2. ones that don't end with a conviction, due to insufficient evidence?
    For 2, there's nothing to do. Our justice system has a lot of protections of the accused built in which make conviction difficult. If the evidence isn't there (but we have no evidence of a fabricated story), we have to leave it as is and recognize no system is perfect.

    For #1, that's tougher. Currently it's possible (at least in America) to the sue the false accuser of defamation and make it stick (e.g. Tawana Brawley), but I am not aware of any other legal recourse for the vindicated defendant - that is, I don't believe falsely accusing someone of an assault is itself a criminal matter.

    There's obviously a lot of difficulty in sorting out #1 from #2 (e.g. the legitimate false accusation as opposed to merely not having sufficient evidence for a conviction), and I'm not sure how best to approach it. Possibly a civil judgment is all we can hope for, but perhaps we could also use the court of public opinion in some manner that would both rehabilitate the falsely accused's image and in some manner disincentivize future false accusations by embarrassing the accuser.

  8. #248
    Quote Originally Posted by LittleFuzzy View Post
    See that's a problem, because that's not a LEGAL distinction. The only legal standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt." Insufficient evidence is a prosecutorial determination made in advance of laying charges. The jury's deliberations are secret and with good reason, and they can find reasonable doubt from any number of valid *or invalid* factors.
    Sorry, I was thinking of "reasonable doubt"

    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    For 2, there's nothing to do. Our justice system has a lot of protections of the accused built in which make conviction difficult. If the evidence isn't there (but we have no evidence of a fabricated story), we have to leave it as is and recognize no system is perfect.

    [...]

    There's obviously a lot of difficulty in sorting out #1 from #2 (e.g. the legitimate false accusation as opposed to merely not having sufficient evidence for a conviction), and I'm not sure how best to approach it. Possibly a civil judgment is all we can hope for, but perhaps we could also use the court of public opinion in some manner that would both rehabilitate the falsely accused's image and in some manner disincentivize future false accusations by embarrassing the accuser.
    You've mostly answered my question. I asked because the threat of being sued for slander etc. may serve as a deterrent to false rape allegations, but has to be balanced against the risk of scaring off people from reporting real rapes because they're afraid that they won't be believed, that they won't get a conviction, AND that they may instead end up getting shafted by a lawsuit.
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  9. #249
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    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    Still don't get this logic. It's irrelevant if it was convenient or not. It's likely that if this were to happen a few years earlier when he was in the running for the top IMF spot, people would say the same thing. Coincidences do not imply a vast right wing conspiracy.
    True, but it still doesn't mean it couldn't have happened like that just because some people would always suspect foul play.
    This is probably the first reasonable thing you've said in this thread. I agree, mostly - false accusations (however uncommon) do need to be appropriately punished. (And GGT is wrong on this one.)


    This I'm not so much in agreement with. By your own sources, there's somewhere between a 98 and 92% chance that a given rape accusation is real (and some ridiculous number of rapes are never even reported, to boot). Given the large societal stigma attached to being a rape victim, it's not unreasonable to make a culture of immediate acceptance of accusations (but NOT guilt) rather than default skepticism - otherwise, you have a decent chance of scaring away a lot of legitimate accusations to protect a proportionally smaller population from embarrassment and scandal.

    While I don't want to disincentivize rape reporting any more than it already is, I do think we should disincentivize fabricated accusations as above. Some stricter punishment regime is not uncalled for.
    So that means we actually agree in essence. I want to see severe punishment for false accusations before I am willing to give more than average credence to alleged rape victims.
    Congratulations America

  10. #250
    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    For #1, that's tougher. Currently it's possible (at least in America) to the sue the false accuser of defamation and make it stick (e.g. Tawana Brawley), but I am not aware of any other legal recourse for the vindicated defendant - that is, I don't believe falsely accusing someone of an assault is itself a criminal matter.
    A few years ago there was a case where a celebrity couple (Neil and Christine Hamilton) was accused of molesting someone. They got investigated etc and eventually it was determined the person making the accusation was lying and seeking to get money from it. She was charged and went to prison.

    "Wasting Police time" is a criminal offence here that covers false allegations, is it not a crime there?
    "Perverting the course of justice" is another criminal offence here.
    Also if it goes to court and its found they lied, there is potential perjury charges.

  11. #251
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    True, but it still doesn't mean it couldn't have happened like that just because some people would always suspect foul play.
    Yes, but we have no a priori reason for suspecting a false accusation.

    So that means we actually agree in essence. I want to see severe punishment for false accusations before I am willing to give more than average credence to alleged rape victims.
    'Severe' punishment? I think there should be some disincentive, but the issue (as above) is that it's very hard to prove an actual lie as opposed to a simple 'he said she said' lack of conviction. If you could prove malicious intent, though, perhaps some serious consequences are reasonable. I suspect this would be a vanishingly small proportion of cases, though. (As I understand it the 8% number for 'false' rape accusations actually refers to rape cases where culpability is unproven - but that doesn't mean a rape didn't occur. The actual number of provably false cases is probably quite small.)

    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    A few years ago there was a case where a celebrity couple (Neil and Christine Hamilton) was accused of molesting someone. They got investigated etc and eventually it was determined the person making the accusation was lying and seeking to get money from it. She was charged and went to prison.

    "Wasting Police time" is a criminal offence here that covers false allegations, is it not a crime there?
    "Perverting the course of justice" is another criminal offence here.
    Also if it goes to court and its found they lied, there is potential perjury charges.
    To be honest I'm not familiar enough with these laws to determine whether they exist in the US. It might not be a bad idea, though.

  12. #252
    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    To be honest I'm not familiar enough with these laws to determine whether they exist in the US. It might not be a bad idea, though.
    Mostly misdemeanor offenses. For culturo-legal reasons our system tries to encourage people to report crimes rather over deterring false accusations particularly in those spheres, like sexual assault, where research has indicated crime is significantly under-reported. And yeah, part of the logic is that a false accusation can be refuted and won't result in a conviction. That may/will still inflict harm on the accused. There is a definite societal harm being done there. Unreported crime creates similar problems. The current determination generally made is that remedying that latter is more pressing than the former. Maybe that determination is incorrect. Personally, I doubt that it's incorrect.
    Last edited by LittleFuzzy; 05-26-2011 at 07:30 PM.
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  13. #253
    Quote Originally Posted by wiggin View Post
    (And GGT is wrong on this one.)

    While I don't want to disincentivize rape reporting any more than it already is, I do think we should disincentivize fabricated accusations as above. Some stricter punishment regime is not uncalled for.

    Okay, fair enough, I agree GGT was unreasonable.

    As above, I don't really agree. I don't see a viable alternative other than taking rape accusations very seriously, and vigorously prosecuting cases with enough evidence. In that context, it's regrettable that the occasional accusation is a fabrication, and we should try to discourage such behavior - but I don't think we should pursue such accusations less forcefully because of this small chance.

    It's not 'OK' that some people's public lives are ruined by such false accusations, but it's very much more not 'OK' for rapes to go underreported and unpunished because the accusation is met with a collective yawn on the part of law enforcement and our justice system.
    I can't be 'wrong' and 'unreasonable' regarding false accusations, when you basically said the same things I did. Please show me where I said it was 'OK' for peoples' lives to be ruined by false accusations. It's not unreasonable or wrong to state the two ways false accusations are handled:

    (1) At the onset of a complaint---police detective work, forensics and evidence flushing out lies from facts, nothing to support filing a charge or prosecuting a case because the claims are obviously false. When there are questionable or conflicting evidence and statements, and it's not obvious who's lying but the victim's claims could be true, it's taken to court for jury decisions.

    (2) During/after a trial---the defense showing reasonable doubt, presenting evidence the accuser is lying, challenging consent, proving a conspiracy, etc. The accused could be (incorrectly) found guilty, but still has the option of appeal. If found not guilty, there's legal recourse to address the false accusations that may harm their reputation or career, with counter-suits for defamation of character, libel or slander, falsifying testimony, perjury, etc.

    Those are just the facts. How we personally feel about this is a totally different topic.



    Quote Originally Posted by Aimless View Post
    Sorry, I was thinking of "reasonable doubt"

    You've mostly answered my question. I asked because the threat of being sued for slander etc. may serve as a deterrent to false rape allegations, but has to be balanced against the risk of scaring off people from reporting real rapes because they're afraid that they won't be believed, that they won't get a conviction, AND that they may instead end up getting shafted by a lawsuit.
    In other words, pretty much what I've said. If I didn't ooze sympathy for the falsely accused, or post my emotions to your satisfaction, too damn bad. After reading Hazir's early and unfounded 'verdict' from his 'gut feelings' with appeal to emotion and outrage....I've tried to be objective and factual where he wasn't. Sure, I could go on about my feelings surrounding sexual assault, my sensitivities for victims of all kinds, but then you'd say I was penis-posting. Or others would say I'm just ranting or going off on tangents....



    Quote Originally Posted by LittleFuzzy View Post
    Mostly misdemeanor offenses. For culturo-legal reasons our system tries to encourage people to report crimes rather over deterring false accusations particularly in those spheres, like sexual assault, where research has indicated crime is significantly under-reported. And yeah, part of the logic is that a false accusation can be refuted and won't result in a conviction. That may/will still inflict harm on the accused. There is a definite societal harm being done there. Unreported crime creates similar problems. The current determination generally made is that remedying that latter is more pressing than the former. Maybe that determination is incorrect. Personally, I doubt that it's incorrect.
    That's what I've been saying, only you said it better. There's also a logical assumption that detectives can and will weed out false accusations before they'd even lead to filing official criminal charges. Lawyers make those decisions with a "preponderance of evidence". When a Grand Jury agrees, it moves to trial. Redundancy is built into the trial itself, where the accused is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

    In other words, Hazir, your gut feelings don't mean much, other than entertaining gossip and speculation. Your distrustful bias against US police or our justice system isn't really grounded in fact but what you've read in social media or seen on TV. At every step along the way, and from the moment the maid ran out of his hotel suite, DSK has been presumed innocent. He's been afforded innocent status through every legal hurdle we have, many steps that are designed to protect the accused from false charges. And if it's proven he wasn't....it could result in charges of prosecutorial misconduct, police collusion, tampering with evidence, denying the accused due process, etc.....and a mistrial.

  14. #254
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    And then we have the NYC criminal system, while not being able to convict 2 men of rape still acting as if they were. Not to mention their dismissal from the police. Who you are trying to fool GGT?

    Who's to trust a system that won't give people a fair deal after acquittal and doesn't have a much better track record with people whose innocence was proven.
    Congratulations America

  15. #255
    Um, they were convicted of lesser charges. And by their own admission, they slept in bed with a naked woman while on duty. Those are pretty damn good grounds for dismissal.
    Hope is the denial of reality

  16. #256
    Even if the woman consented, I'd fire anyone I found out was lying naked in a bed while on duty.

  17. #257
    Apparently Hazir thinks that a policeman walking a drunk woman home and then getting into bed with her while she's naked is not grounds for dismissal (this is the story of the policemen).
    Hope is the denial of reality

  18. #258
    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    Even if the woman consented, I'd fire anyone I found out was lying naked in a bed while on duty.
    Unexplored business idea?



    What's this about policemen and drunk women?? I'm not sure I understand what you were saying in that post, Hazir
    "One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."

  19. #259
    That is sick. Of course they should get fired.

  20. #260

  21. #261
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    And then we have the NYC criminal system, while not being able to convict 2 men of rape still acting as if they were. Not to mention their dismissal from the police. Who you are trying to fool GGT?

    Who's to trust a system that won't give people a fair deal after acquittal and doesn't have a much better track record with people whose innocence was proven.
    Have I implied the US system is perfect, infallible, above criticism? No. I've acknowledged we have problems in almost every reply.

    This thread seems to be a platform for you to hate on the US, using DSK's case as an example of our inferiority, compared to Europe. Or you were convinced this would prove how the US is rife with women making false sex charges, extorting money with the threat of ruining men's lives, innocent victims littered across our landscape. No man is safe, especially VIP European bankers or politicians. And no one gives a damn, especially not the NYPD or its DAs. In your mind they'll purposely turn a blind eye to this injustice in how DSK has been treated, maybe even join the conspiracy to smear an innocent man's reputation and career. Because that's how the US operates.

    You drew us in by asking, "So, did he or didn't he?", but that's a veiled question, with your contempt and distrust for the US wrapped around it. Who are you trying to fool, Hazir?

  22. #262
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    Nice try, but not really. Because it was quite clear İ wasn't talking about the trial, but how the prosecutor actually tried to make it sound a sif the case was won on the main charges.
    Last edited by Hazir; 05-27-2011 at 09:18 PM.
    Congratulations America

  23. #263
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    Quote Originally Posted by RandBlade View Post
    Even if the woman consented, I'd fire anyone I found out was lying naked in a bed while on duty.
    You actually know that happened while they were on duty? You even know it happened at all?
    Congratulations America

  24. #264
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    Nice try, but not really. Because it was quite clear İ wasn't talking about the trial, but how the prosecutor actually tried to make it sound a sif the case was won on the main charges.
    The prosecutor can claim whatever he wants. Your claim was that these cops got fired purely because they were accused of rape, despite not being convicted of it. The reality is that they were fired for engaging in highly inappropriate behavior while on duty, according to their own words.

    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    You actually know that happened while they were on duty? You even know it happened at all?
    The cops themselves claimed this. The only disagreement was over whether one of them actually had sex with the woman.
    Hope is the denial of reality

  25. #265
    This could deserve a separate thread, but they really didn't/couldn't prove she was actually raped. There was some really poor misconduct and the officers were fired immediately after the verdict. But there was very little indication of a rape. The woman didn't even remember most of the night and didn't remember anyone having sex with her.

    Yet maybe half a dozen people I know are at city hall protesting that they know more than a jury that spent two months on this.

  26. #266
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    The point remains; they were acquitted for the rape and still, because they were convicted on minor charges they are being treated as rapists. To me that sounds guilty untill death. And probably now they'll go on some sex-offender list to ruin their lives for good.
    Congratulations America

  27. #267
    Are you just trolling now?
    Hope is the denial of reality

  28. #268
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    Quote Originally Posted by Loki View Post
    Are you just trolling now?
    Absolutely not, they were found guilty of what appears to amount to tresspassing and yet will have to live with the stain of being seen as rapists. The DA's office made the first move when it started to tell they were happy with the conviction when everybody knew they had lost on the nain charges. Pulling an Al Capone so to say.
    Congratulations America

  29. #269
    Quote Originally Posted by Hazir View Post
    The point remains; they were acquitted for the rape and still, because they were convicted on minor charges they are being treated as rapists. To me that sounds guilty untill death. And probably now they'll go on some sex-offender list to ruin their lives for good.
    The officers were convicted of three counts of official misconduct for entering the woman’s apartment, but the jury found them not guilty of all other charges, including burglary and falsifying business records. The Police Department said the officers were fired Thursday.

    People aren't placed on "some sex-offender list" for convictions of official misconduct. Stop bullshitting.

  30. #270
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    So they were guilty of tresspassing, and then the 'these guys are disgusting' crowd kicks in and they are fired from their job. You really hold your NY policemen to astoundingly high standards compared to any other cop. Or maybe the difference is just that these guys were already found guilty of rape for no other reason than that that charge was brought against them and the pre-judgement is what stuck, not the actual verdict.
    Congratulations America

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