Skeptic Guy
Raccoon Death Squad Leader
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2006
- Messages
- 6,990
This isn't skepticism or rationality, this is deliberate ignorance and deliberate spin.
Saying Polanski "drugged her" could be forgiven as an error if you did it once, since it's technically accurate but misleading.
Saying Polanski "raped her" could be forgiven as an error if you did it once, since you might have dropped the vital word "statutorily" by accident, and might not have known that there is no such offence on the California books.
Saying that she said "no" could be forgiven as an error if you did it once, since plenty of idiots have claimed it as a fact when it's merely an unsupported and contested allegation, so you could have been forgiven for thinking that it was actually an established and agreed-upon fact.
However insisting on running all of these errors together, after you have been corrected once already, indicates to me that you're not interested in truth or accuracy.
Spin? Spin? You have got to be kidding. He plead guilty to California Penal Code Section 261.5 (http://law.onecle.com/california/penal/261.5.html), which is equivalent to statutory rape. Please go ahead and read the penal code above, we'll wait.
Polanski admitted to providing her a part of a Quaalude, so that's not in dispute.
She said "no", you can choose to not believe her if you want, but I have to question why you would automatically assume a 13-year old would lie about it, while a 40-something old sexual predator wouldn't.
Wells was not the DA on the Polanski case. That was Gunson.
Wells indeed recanted the statement that he showed the judge the Oktoberfest photos and coached on a longer sentence. Upon recanting, he said that he gave the photos to a bailiff who in turn gave them to the judge.
Why he made those statements is a mystery. Has he already been censured by the bar for that? Isn't those lies also interfering with an ongoing case?
Polanski's lawyers claim they heard the judge wanted hm in prison and subsequently deported.
Of course not. But then the US should show Switzerland that everything went fine and dandy. The whole decades-long discussion shows that there have been quite some irregularities going on at the LA court in 1977.
Bolding mine.
I didn't say he was the DA on the case, he was a prosecutor uninvolved with the case at the time. Wells may be censured, especially if Polanski is ever brought back to the US to face justice, which, in my opinion, lends credence to his recantation.
Whether Polanski's lawyers heard that or not does not allow Polanski to make a run for it. That is not part of the California penal code. What is part of the code is "failure to appear" which will likely result in additional time, if or when he does appear before the bench.
If they, indeed, have a case of judicial maleficence, then Polanski needs to come back to the US and say his piece.
That makes sense... using a term you know is incorrect ("statutory rape") and then deciding that it would be even more fun to illegitimately drop the vital qualifier and just call it "rape" is just fine. Correcting the people who pull that stunt is "a deliberate attempt to muddy the water".
I think it's the other way around. People who want to exaggerate the seriousness of what Polanski did (which was serious enough in and of itself) love to cash in on the associations of the word "rape". They love the sound of the word "rape" so much they can't stop saying it, and if you tell them they aren't allowed say "rape" any more they react like a toddler who has had its favourite rattle taken away.
"Unlawful sex with a minor who may or may not have consented, and was certainly already sexually active" describes exactly the same event in more factual terms, but it's not nearly as much fun for them to say.
Again, bolding mine.
Ah, this explains much of your attitude toward this case and is despicable.