Unconsciousness rampant in trial In the recent...
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Unconsciousness rampant in trial
In the recent trial of the teenagers accused of rape and sexually
assaulting a 16-year-old girl, which ended in a deadlocked jury, it
seems that not only was Jane Doe unconscious during the attack on
her, but members of the jury must have been unconscious during much
of the testimony, or their decisions would have not been as they
were.
Finally, we have unconscionable ravings in your Mailbag on
Wednesday (“Mistrial ‘sickening’ but not surprising”). The writer
seems to place the entire blame of the mistrial on the Bush
administration. I would fear the legitimate results of any jury on
which she might sit.
DON HILLIARD
Newport Beach
As a woman, outcome of trial was an outrage
As I listen to a local radio station announce the mistrial of the
Haidl gang-rape case, it is mentioned that the defendants received
slaps on the backs in congratulations.
How fitting. According to the defendants, this woman encouraged
this activity, all in the name of fun. As a woman, this is an
outrage. What rape victim is going to come forward, when she knows
her sex life is going to be brought out in court? Why would any rape
victim subject herself to something like this, when in the end, the
defendants will walk away.
MARIA MAIORANA-BISS
San Clemente
Expect only more of same after mistrial
With regard to the mistrial in the case of the three teens accused
of rape and sexual assault, when we acquit or can no longer recognize
criminal depravity, we should neither be surprised nor express
disgust that we have more of it.
BYRON DE ARAKAL
Costa Mesa
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Bryon de Arakal is a Costa Mesa Parks and
Recreation Commissioner.
Abortion not limited
to just woman’s body
As a person who voted for George W. Bush and his “neo-con,
fundamental Christian-right views” in 2000, I feel compelled to
respond to Pamela Brande’s attempt Wednesday to label the case of
Greg Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith Spann (“Mistrial ‘sickening’
but not surprising”) as a deliberate attack on women’s rights.
I am in complete agreement that a woman has the right to make
decisions regarding her own body. What Brande and many other
anti-abortion advocates fail to understand, or at least admit to, is
that abortion is not limited to just the woman’s body. She is making
a life-or-death decision regarding an innocent, unborn child. Roe v.
Wade to the contrary, hopefully our judicial system is beginning to
understand. It is for this reason that Scott Peterson is being
appropriately charged with murder in the death of his unborn son.
From a moral and legal perspective, can taking the life of an unborn
child be murder in one instance and a woman’s “choice” in another?
DON SNYDER
Costa Mesa
Students deserve more than casual apology
Rarely have I seen a more blatant case of “blame the victim” than
in the recent hoopla surrounding the decision of several graduating
UC Irvine Muslim students to wear stoles declaring the “shahada,” the
fundamental Muslim declaration of faith.
For any group or individual to publicly label such an action as
support of terrorism not only betrays a profound ignorance of
religious worldviews, but is also racism -- utter, vile, dangerous
racism.
Tarnishing the image of a group of students deserves more than
just a casual apology.
An incident like this demands that we take a hard look at the
double standards we employ when evaluating actions of American
Muslims versus any other American citizen. The accusations against
the students from prominent anti-defamation groups are an ironic
black eye in the face of the civil rights and religious freedom that
they strive to protect. The UC Irvine administration deserves praise
for handling this incident justly, and the students involved deserve
a major and sincere apology from all those who blindly accused them.
AMMAR AHMED
Houston, Texas
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