Dance, 22, sentenced to life term
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Deepa Bharath
A judge on Tuesday declined a former UC Irvine student’s request for
a new trial and sentenced him to life in prison calling the
22-year-old defendant’s testimony “laughable.”
Superior Court Judge Frank Fasel said he did not believe Brian
Dance’s statements that a 15-year-old girl whom he met on the
Internet and took to a UCI parking lot asked to be whipped and
humiliated.
Dance’s new attorney Stuart Faber argued that his client’s former
attorney Marlin Stapleton Jr. misguided and misrepresented him by
telling him to opt for a nonjury trial.
“Had this case been presented to a jury properly, had [Stapleton]
investigated his witnesses ... there is a strong likelihood that the
outcome may have been different,” Faber told the court.
But Fasel refused to accept Faber’s argument. He said during his
verdict that it was obvious to him that Stapleton did the best he
could for Dance.
“This case is a lawyer’s nightmare,” he said. “Here, you have a
client who confessed that everything happened. There was overwhelming
evidence. [Stapleton] was in a legal and factual box. He had an
extremely difficult decision to make.”
Stapleton himself testified on Friday for close to three hours
when he told the court that he saw no other way for his client but to
opt for a nonjury trial. He also said that Dance had never mentioned
to him that the sex was consensual. Dance did not testify during the
trial.
But on Monday, he took the stand and said that the 15-year-old
victim, who he drove from the Block at Orange to the UCI campus,
begged him to whip her and have sex with her as part of a
“humiliation” role play.
Dance had admitted several times that he had beaten the girl with
his belt, carved a swastika on her face with a knife and sexually
assaulted her.
“When I stopped whipping her she said ‘Whip me. Whip me. Is that
all you’ve got?’” Dance said.
He told the court that he obeyed the victim because she threatened
to file a complaint against him for statutory rape -- a threat which
made him angry and frustrated.
Dance said he tied her hands with duct tape to fulfill her
“bondage” fantasy. He whipped her with his belt for “several, several
minutes” on her pelvis, back, face and neck, he said. Dance,
answering the prosecutor, said he was concerned about her shedding
blood in her parent’s car.
He also told the prosecutor that he never felt attracted to the
victim and that she was “ugly.” After the episode, which lasted about
two hours, Dance forced her out of his car after threatening to bomb
her house if she told anyone that he raped her, he said.
Dance said he took money out of her wallet “just out of anger and
frustration.”
Police arrested Dance two days later when a friend of the victim,
acting as a decoy, talked to him in a chat room and lured him to the
Block at Orange again.
Judge Fasel told Faber that his client wouldn’t have stood a
chance with a jury with the testimony he gave in court Monday.
“There is no way any rational trier of fact would find your client
not guilty,” he said.
The victim, now 17 years old, stood up and made a statement about
how the incident has affected her life.
“Does he have any idea what I had to go through?” she said,
reading from a prepared speech. “Does he know how nauseating it was
to have to swallow the spit and phlegm he kept hacking into my mouth?
Or how painful it was to be whipped time after time with nothing to
relieve the excruciating sting but another strike from his belt?”
The victim said she wanted to be killed to end her suffering.
“He deserves to spend the rest of his pathetic existence in prison
till he dies,” she said. “ ... I hope everyone here can see what an
evil cruel beast he is and never have mercy on him because God knows
he didn’t have any on me.”
Dance, who also spoke, said he is “sorry for everything that
happened.”
“I’m sorry for all the insults I cast on her,” he said. “If I had
the opportunity, I’d go back and undo everything that happened that
day. Most of all, I’m sorry I ever met [the victim].”
Dance, who was dressed in a yellow jumpsuit, sat still with no
facial expression as Fasel read out the sentence.
Dance’s mother let out a cry of anguish as Fasel said Dance will
not be eligible for parole until after 25 years.
Right after the judge adjourned the court, Dance’s father, Larry
Dance, yelled out: “This is B.S. This is not right.”
His booming voice resounded on the court’s corridors as he ranted
about the unfairness of the judge’s sentence.
“My son didn’t kill no one,” he said. “There were no injuries.
There was no death. My son had no prior criminal record.”
Larry Dance said the district attorney “overcharged” his son.
“Life in prison for assault?” he asked. “A person who commits
murder gets away with 25 years in prison. Where’s the justice here?”
He said he would appeal the judge’s decision “all the way” if he
needs to.
Dance’s mother said her son is a “good and honest boy.”
“I could have accepted this if he was a gang member or something,”
she said. “He was a good student. He went to church.”
Both of Dance’s parents said they believe their son’s story.
“He just met the wrong girl and got into the wrong circumstances,”
Larry Dance said. “I’m not saying he’s not guilty of assault, but
life in prison for assault? It just doesn’t make sense. It’s wrong.”
The victim’s mother said she is happy that justice has been
served.
“I’m glad he’s been put away and it’s all over,” she said. “The
hardest part for us was to drag her through all this for this long.
She’s an innocent person.”
The victim said she agreed to help police because she “wanted him
to get caught, no matter what.”
“I didn’t want him doing this to other girls,” she said.
The victim, who recently appeared on the John Walsh Show, said she
hopes to help other girls who have gone through such horror.
“It’s something I want to do in the future,” she said. “I think I
can help them.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at deepa.bharath@ latimes.com.
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