• Jax@sh.itjust.works
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    5 hours ago

    " By finding him guilty but not punishing him, he will be made to feel guilty and the chance of him reoffending will be prevented, without socially impairing the man "

    So that judge is either a rapist or an idiot.

  • chrischryse@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Ok I can understand if he was caught with pot, drug paraphernalia, or drunk driving (without injuring someone).

    But raping someone? Idc if you’re talented or have a bright future you should have it on your record or face a punishment like probation

  • explodicle@sh.itjust.works
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    5 hours ago

    The man hasn’t been named by Belgian media. 😠

    Internet detectives, hear my call! Find the name of this rapist so that we may plaster it everywhere like the rapist Brock Turner!

  • kiagam@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    And when I say I don’t trust judges and that the justice system of most places is broken for giving a single person the final decision power, based on whatever they think is right, people say I’m trolling.

    Judges pull decisions out of their ass to fulfill whatever interest they have. Or sometimes just because they are stupid.

    Good judges are super rare.

    • stormeuh@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Yeah in this case I think it’s more a case of “hey this guy looks kind of like my son”. In this case I think it led to a miscarriage of justice, but I think in other cases that kind of thinking could protect against excessively harsh punishments. In the end I think it comes down to inequality. Bigger inequality shrinks the pool of people judges can intuitively relate to, which in turn makes judgements more unequal.

  • But_my_mom_says_im_cool@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    So if he’s gonna rape as a med student, he’s definitely gonna rape as a doctor. And that judge is a rapist too, judging from their warped views

      • WoodScientist@sh.itjust.works
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        1 hour ago

        He probably did something similar in his past. Maybe raped a drunk girl at a party or similar while in undergrad. Never got caught for it, and never went on to do it again. So he figured if he can learn his lesson and not repeat the crime, why not this kid? Justice to the victims isn’t even considered.

  • DV8@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Oh wow, something from Belgium showed up here. Obviously most reactions are the same here. But I would urge everyone to read more details about this. As there much more uncomfortable nuance here. One of those being that the dude is also in agreement he did something wrong. He also gave a relatively accurate description of the events of that evening that got proven with phone records and CCTV at different locations. Making his account of what happened at the least somewhat reliable.

    Obviously the woman could not consent because she was drunk as fuck. And she’s allowed to get drunk as fuck without being taken advantage off. CCTV showed them kissing at the bar they met. Phone records show he tried to call her friend she was supposed to go home with. CCTV shows them going to that friend’s dorm and not getting in and waiting there for half an hour. Then they walk back to his place while kissing on the way there. The morning after his messages to her indicate he wants to continue seeing her. (https://m.nieuwsblad.be/cnt/dmf20250402_95297572?journeybuilder=nopaywall but it’s in Dutch)

    Again, she could not consent, and he as the least drunk of both of them bears the responsibility of this. I do think he should have had some form of punishment above of what he got and for the woman’s feeling of safety a restraining order like she asked. And something that would have made mandatory counselling and follow-up possible. Not to mention that although justice in Belgium isn’t supposed to be revenge, it should also cause some sort of satisfaction for the victim.

    This situation just shows that the definition of rape over the decades has become more complex and nuanced, but unfortunately the tools to deal with this have not. This dude definitely did something wrong, but he’s not just a vicious predator.

      • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        It really depends on how drunk you actually were at the time, and that’s what makes cases like this so difficult. Generally speaking, simply being drunk isn’t enough.

        Hell, even being blackout drunk isn’t enough. Because you can be blacked out without being passed out; Blackout drunk simply means your brain isn’t recording things to your memory, so you won’t remember it after you sober up. Contrary to popular belief, alcohol doesn’t make you forget existing memories. It just makes it so you don’t ever commit things to memory in the first place. That’s what happens when you’re blackout drunk.

        In order to be incapable of consenting, you need to be so drunk that you can’t comprehend what is happening. Because informed consent requires two things: Information anbout what is happening, and enthusiasm. You can have both, even while blackout drunk. Because you forgetting your enthusiasm the next morning doesn’t automatically make it rape. After all, you were informed and enthusiastic when it was happening, so you consented. If you were capable of understanding what was happening and were enthusiastic, it’s not legally considered rape.

        And that’s a surprisingly high threshold to beat. You usually need to prove to the courts that you were basically passed out (and therefore unable to be informed about what was happening) before they’ll consider it rape.

        Even if people would colloquially consider drunk sex rape, that’s not typically how the courts view it. And that’s a large part of why so many accused rapists get off without a guilty verdict; The victim basically has to prove that they were missing either information or enthusiasm to overcome the accused’s “they consented to it” defense. And if the victim was blacked out and doesn’t even remember the evening, that becomes extremely difficult to do without outside witnesses corroborating that the victim was passed out and/or combative.

        And hell, in cases like the Brock Turner one, even when the victim proves that she was passed out, the rapist can still get away with just a slap on the wrist.

        • stringere@sh.itjust.works
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          19 hours ago

          Brock Turner?

          You mean convicted rapist Brock Turner?

          I just want to make sure that’s the rapist Brock Turner you’re talking about and not some other Brock Turner.

          I only know of one Brock Turner, and he definitely raped a woman, but the judge let him off easy because he has affluenze.

          The judge decided that a punishment might jeopardize the rich kid’s future, and cited that he hadn’t been brought up to realize the consequences of his actions. To my naive understanding that seems like a really teachable moment.

          By the way, in case anyone wasn’t sure: Brock Turner, the convicted rapist, raped a woman and got away with it because his parents are rich.

          • klemptor@startrek.website
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            7 hours ago

            Rapist Brock Turner, aka rapist Allen Turner, who got a 6-month slap-on-the-wrist sentence for what his father called (and I quote) “twenty minutes of action”? That rapist Brock Allen Turner? The one who only served 3 months?!

            • stringere@sh.itjust.works
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              4 hours ago

              Yeah, Brock aka Allen Turner! The rapist who barely got inconvenienced after he raped a woman who was passed out. The one who had two guys testify against him because they interrupted him in the middle of raping someone.

              That rapist Brock Turner.

      • MBech@feddit.dk
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        24 hours ago

        And how do you determine who raped who if it’s a question about how drunk you were? I have had a lot of nights out in my teens (european), where I have no clue what happened after midnight, but didn’t get home until 05:00. If I had sex with someone pretty much equally as drunk, who did the raping?

      • DV8@lemmy.world
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        24 hours ago

        There are different levels of being drunk. She was so drunk she blacked out and had trouble walking. He As drunk but can supply a recollection of what happened. There’s nuance like I said, but someone who can recollect events and relies on his rational actions where he called her friends can logically be considered to be more responsible for not taking into consideration she was too drunk to be able to consent.

        • 1847953620@lemmy.world
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          23 hours ago

          Alcohol impairment can be very messy. I know someone who had 1 and a half drinks, had no speech slurring or obvious signs of being black-out drunk, but did not remember a third of the night the next day because she’s a lightweight that’s drank a single-digit number of times in her life (she’d also eaten very little that day and had some recent sleep debt). I would not have guessed she was blackout drunk, she was just talking about her problems and was articulate the entire time I saw her. If I didn’t know she had been drinking, I can’t think of how I would’ve known short of some kind of specific motor function test that’s made to suss that out/harder than just sitting around, talking, and occasionally going to the restroom. She just looked a little tired. When we spoke later, she didn’t remember basically anything after a certain point (a couple of hours’ worth) and wondered if some vague flashes of memories had been dreams. It was rather surprising to me.

  • LordGimp@lemm.ee
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    22 hours ago

    I remember an officer in the USCG accused of rape while I worked as a welder on base. Guy had to paint the fire lane on curbs for a month while his superiors quietly hushed up the incident so as to not disturb the guys advancement prospects (he was the kid of some higher rank admin).

    I’m sure that taught him a lesson

    /s

    • spirinolas@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Yes, the rapist Brock Allen Turner is also the first thing that crossed my mind. How he got away after raping that girl and now is even trying to change his name.

    • iheartneopets@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      Hey all, anyone who cares about/is interested in knowing more about the crime committed by the rapist Brock Allen Turner should read Know My Name, written by the woman who was actually assaulted, Chanel Miller.

      I highly recommend listening to the audio book, as she reads it herself and has a powerful voice.

  • Nate Cox@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    By finding him guilty but not punishing him, he will be made to feel guilty and the chance of him reoffending will be prevented, without socially impairing the man

    What a load of horse shit. “Letting him get away with rape penalty free will ensure he doesn’t do it again” is some crazy fucking logic. Seems like knowing there are no consequences for your actions would make repeating the offense significantly more likely.

    • gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com
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      1 day ago

      It’s funny that the court would explicitly legitimize the idea that some people deserve to be “socially impaired” and others do not despite committing exactly the same crime.

      Funny in the sense that it contradicts the entire foundation that the legal system is based on and makes the court look illegitimate and deliberately corrupt.

    • lividweasel@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I’m sure this concept of non-punishment will now be applied to many other cases across social classes, right?

      Right…?

    • MangoCats@feddit.it
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      1 day ago

      It’s a bit like the old sitcom “Night Court” where the judge would find the ladies of the evening guilty as charged and turn them loose with “time served” as their penalty.

      This “lack of sentence” is a bit more than time served since the penalty for this crime can still be applied at any time if the offender is in court for anything else.

      It’s overly lenient and a bad message, but better than letting off manslaughter charges for a defense of “affluenza.” https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-43621839

  • gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com
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    1 day ago

    The conviction will not appear on the man’s criminal record. However, if he reoffends, he will be sentenced for this rape as well as for the new offence.

    Why wait to be proven wrong? I don’t understand. Rapists shouldn’t be doctors.

      • gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com
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        23 hours ago

        In his summing up the judge said “It has been proven that sexual intercourse took place at a time that she was in a state that meant that she couldn’t possibly consent to it. The offence is serious and unacceptable.”

        Wow, we can both read! That’s awesome. Now one of us just has to work on their comprehension and maybe even finish the article next time…

        • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          You asked why wait. The point of jail and fines is to avoid reoffending. The judge thinks he won’t, and will be more valuable to society as a doctor than an inmate. Also If he does this again then he will get hit twice as hard.

          • gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com
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            22 hours ago

            Something tells me that they are not publishing his name because they’re betting that his future patients would feel differently. I would not want to see Dr. Rapist for any reason, even if he’s the best physician in the city.

    • keen@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Don’t worry, that’s not the real reason. The real reason is most likely that the perpetrators family is rich and the victim’s family isn’t.

      • athairmor@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Latest case of affluenza. He needs the Brock Turner treatment. You remember the rapist Brock Turner, right?

      • DV8@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Regardless of why he got suspension of penalty, if you read anything about the case it wasn’t because he or his parents are rich. Personally I think there’s more nuance than the clickbait headlines. I think he should not have gotten the penalty suspended but I can understand why that happened. The shortened motivation for this does read like ragebait ofcourse. His future should not have been as important as his cooperation, verifiable truthfulness and the fact he did abuse the state of someone who could not consent. Where that balance ends for punishment ends I find hard to say. But to reduce it to that he’s rich is just populist nonsense.

      • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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        1 day ago

        I actually spend quite a lot of time in Leuven these days, and looking at some of those houses and the general state of Belgium today … I can’t say that’s not likely to be true.

        It’s just that the place kinda struck me as safe. I guess it’s not.

        • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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          21 hours ago

          Belgium has some of (if not the) lowest income inequality in the OECD due to our very harsh income tax (highest median tax wedge of the OECD, yes even including the nordics). With quite a few asterisks attached to that statement of course because our fiscal system is a complete mess so if you’re special kinds of well off (e.g. you make your income on capital gains) you’ll be taxed very little.
          How low income inequality doesn’t correlate to very high standards of living like it does in the Nordics… Well I’ll leave it to historians and economists to hash it out. The answer you get will almost certainly reflect that person’s personal politics. Harsh industrial decline is worth mentioning though.

          Wallonia is measurably poorer than Flanders, but both regions are developed western economies. The US has a murder rate 535 % of Belgium’s, and I don’t see anyone warning students away from studying there (or well, not until the past few months).
          That judge should be investigated and the prosecutor should definitely appeal, and besides there is a lot of work to do safety-wise, especially for women to be able to feel safe, but that’s hardly a problem specific to Leuven or Belgium.

        • alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          It is quite safe. What I heard about this case is that the victim was happy with the outcome.

          They met at a party, she was drunk. He said he asked consent, she said he raped her. There was no evidence or allegation of force, just that she couldn’t have consented in her drunken state.

          He had a clean record.

          He got convicted and ordered to pay €3500 and if he commits another crime, then this one will count too.

          She was satisfied with the outcome. She especially wanted recognition that it was rape.

          I think this is a good outcome. If he ever rapes someone again, he’ll be a serial rapist and get the book thrown at him.

          And on the flipside, I find it difficult to throw the book at people under the circumstances in these kind of cases.

          • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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            1 day ago

            They met at a party

            According to this article in DM she’s on camera stumbling around the city streets so drunk that should couldn’t stay upright and that’s where she ran into this guy. Of course that article also says this happened at “quarter to five at night.” which makes no sense.

            • curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              1 day ago

              There are a few other articles it seems - this one has:

              While the victim has found some solace in the court’s recognition of her assault, she is disappointed that her attacker faces no real consequences.

              Which says she was not happy with the outcome, only that the rape was recognized.

              Per this article:

              Leuven University Hospital has suspended a medical student that was convicted of raping another student but was not sentenced for his crime.

              The school has at least ensured there were some measure of consequences. Also:

              Chief physician Gert Van Assche said that "First and foremost our thoughts go out to the victim. Together with KU Leuven we will look at the court’s ruling and examine how we will go on from there. In the meantime, as a precautionary measure the doctor concerned has been suspended from duties at the hospital”.

              The only other article was paywalled and seemed to have no additional information anyway.

              Edit: I think its worth noting, though it can be seen in the link, he was studying gynecology.

            • anon6789@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              Also how many people will potentially suffer before another one comes forward and gets taken seriously? 🤨

              Nevertheless, the judge refrained from passing sentence. “It is undeniable that he passed the line of what is permissible. The man showed a lack of respect for the victim’s physical, psychological and sexual boundaries.

              I don’t know how they do it over there, but where I’m from, those are 3 things someone should probably respect if they’re going to be placed in a position requiring great trust like a doctor…

    • andybytes@programming.dev
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      20 hours ago

      If we are going to be ol fashioned then we are going to be ol fashioned… If there is no justice we will go and find justice. We’re even seeing this with the likes of Saint Luigi. People just don’t understand history. FAFO

      The Kidnap Years: The Astonishing True History of the Forgotten Kidnapping Epidemic That Shook Depression-Era America David Stout

  • fucktrump@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    He was training to be a gynecologist, so definitely would rape again. Don’t wish for him to have another victim but sounds like a second offense gets him a sentence for the first one as well.

    • jsomae@lemmy.ml
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      His training to be a gynecologist is irrelevant. Please do not propagate the myth that men go into gynecology to take advantage of women. If he’s a rapist, that’s independent.