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Jeffrey Epstein arrested for child sex trafficking

The normal rules do apply.

You need to familiarize yourself with concepts like negligence, recklessness, and willful blindness, and why they are sufficient to establish both civil and criminal culpability for some crimes in the absence of strict intent.


Another concept is strict liability: the act is the crime, regardless of intent. A common example is felony murder: if someone is killed during another felony, everybody involved gets charged, even if a specific person didn't kill or intend to kill anybody (as, say, the getaway driver at a bank robbery). It's truly bizarre to keep claiming that sex with someone too young to consent isn't a crime as long as you weren't sure the victim is too young. That's not what the law says. You need to be sure that she isn't.
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/what-common-strict-liability-crimes.html
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/what-common-strict-liability-crimes.html
https://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Felony-Murder+Rule
 
It's truly bizarre to keep claiming that sex with someone too young to consent isn't a crime as long as you weren't sure the victim is too young. That's not what the law says. You need to be sure that she isn't.

"I didn't know" is especially likely to fall on deaf ears when there's substantial reason to believe she's probably underage...for instance, when the girl is ostensibly being pimped to you by a man who has an actual reputation for interest and trafficking in underage girls.
 
"I didn't know" is especially likely to fall on deaf ears when there's substantial reason to believe she's probably underage...for instance, when the girl is ostensibly being pimped to you by a man who has an actual reputation for interest and trafficking in underage girls.

Not just a reputation, but a criminal conviction and a place on the sex offender registry.
 
Another concept is strict liability: the act is the crime, regardless of intent. A common example is felony murder: if someone is killed during another felony, everybody involved gets charged, even if a specific person didn't kill or intend to kill anybody (as, say, the getaway driver at a bank robbery). It's truly bizarre to keep claiming that sex with someone too young to consent isn't a crime as long as you weren't sure the victim is too young. That's not what the law says. You need to be sure that she isn't.
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/what-common-strict-liability-crimes.html
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/what-common-strict-liability-crimes.html
https://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Felony-Murder+Rule

Ever since the Bentley case in England (the 'let him have it' murder) it doesn't have felony murder UK equivalent. You can be an accessory to the crime instead.
 
Ever since the Bentley case in England (the 'let him have it' murder) it doesn't have felony murder UK equivalent. You can be an accessory to the crime instead.

Incorrect. Since 1957 (in England and Wales), it’s no longer been covered by statute law, but the common law principle of joint enterprise (which is what was applied in the Bentley case) persists and is still used.
 
I'm surprised no one has posted the documentary of the Prince and the Paedophile here.

Essentially, it is Virginia Giuffre's side of the story, with another witness from South Africa also explaining how they were groomed and exploited by Epstein and Maxwell. It is pretty detailed, and intercut with Andrew Windsor's own claims. Giuffre comes across as quite convincing, but the Panorama is not uncritical of either women's claims pointing, out that there are some inaccuracies or inconsistencies with their stories.

There is also an interview with Alan Dershowtiz who is also implicated by one of the women in the documentary.

 
I'm surprised no one has posted the documentary of the Prince and the Paedophile here.

Essentially, it is Virginia Giuffre's side of the story, with another witness from South Africa also explaining how they were groomed and exploited by Epstein and Maxwell. It is pretty detailed, and intercut with Andrew Windsor's own claims. Giuffre comes across as quite convincing, but the Panorama is not uncritical of either women's claims pointing, out that there are some inaccuracies or inconsistencies with their stories.

There is also an interview with Alan Dershowtiz who is also implicated by one of the women in the documentary.


They may or may not be hoping to get their hands on a lot of money in compensation. The US culture of litigation is also not one much cared for in Europe. However, the more I hear of this case, and I must admit it wasn't until Prince Andrew's interview that I took any interest in it, the more I am convinced these women are telling the truth. OK, so maybe they misremember a detail here and there, such what took place at which location and on what date. Paradoxically that is all the more reason it sounds authentic, because a carefully scripted liar will never diverge from his or her story, whereas someone being straightforward is more relaxed and can seemingly contradict themselves on minor points. If I think back to 2001 or when I was seventeen, I can remember key events as clear as day but could I tell you whether it was a Wednesday or a Tuesday or happened in Oxford Street or Charing Cross Road, or was it Kensington High Street? We can use key dates like a family member's birthday, as Prince Andrew did and try and pinpoint the restaurant and who was there.

I'm guessing that Virginia and Sarah attended so many events in their 'working' lives they are bound to get some minor details wrong but the memorable details right.

What I find strange is what we are not being told. Clearly each of these women have been told they can only talk about their own experience and nobody else's, thus we have a peculiarly narrow focus of two or three women recounting what happened to them in various locations, which ipso facto is only going to be of their own small world, yet we are not getting the bigger picture IMV of what is being covered up.
 
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It is reported that Canadian organizations who have Andrew as their Royal patron are dropping him as fast as they can. Several specific organizations listed in this morning's paper. More to come I bet.
 
Donald Trump is trying to distance himself from Prince Andrew (and, presumably, Epstein, who he described as a “terrific guy” and “a lot of fun to be with”), claiming not to know him, evidence to the contrary notwithstanding.
 
Here's the original. I still can't zoom it enough, but it's bigger and it has more content than what is shown above. Also a high-quality footnote:

This chart spawned from Crazy Days and Nights (CDAN) podcasts (Patreon Ep. 77 & Ep. 284) where he shared blinds and known facts. In addition,
other research was conducted and links to that research can be found throughout this chart in any of the font that is blue. Some of these details
are “alleged” and not 100% confirmed. Not every player confirmed and/or alleged may be in here but in time this will be updated.

Updated 7/15/19
 
Donald Trump is trying to distance himself from Prince Andrew (and, presumably, Epstein, who he described as a “terrific guy” and “a lot of fun to be with”), claiming not to know him, evidence to the contrary notwithstanding.

To be fair, there's a lot of people trying to distance themselves from Prince Andrew right now, and wondering how well they actually know him. And I can see Donald Trump meeting someone a few times at various functions, without ever really getting to know them.
 

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