Parliament House sexual assault and harassment allegations
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- David
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^ I think that's the one thing here that's close to 100% certain: sooner or later, one way or the other, the accused's name will come out, and he will have to confront this allegation publicly in some way.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
David, where were you between 7:45pm and 8:03pm on 3 May 1988?David wrote:If you needed a living victim in all cases, no murder or manslaughter that doesn't occur in public would ever be prosecuted. But that's not the case, and it's not necessarily the case for crimes like this, either.stui magpie wrote:There were 2 people who knew what happened, 1 of them is now dead.
There's no witnesses to interview, just some written submissions to read and ask the question of the accused, which has essentially been done. Just not transparently and publicly.
For instance, the minister denies the rape, but that doesn't mean questions can't be asked and some truth can't emerge. Did he know the woman in question? Did he have sex with her? Did people see them go off together? Where was he on the night in question? Does he have an alibi? etc. It may not be possible to prove 100% that he committed the rape in any circumstance, but if he gets caught out in a lie, that might well suggest that he's trying to hide something, and increase the likelihood of him being found guilty. So I wouldn't say an investigation is a fruitless endeavour.
What were you wearing then?
What colour were your socks?
What did you have for lunch that day?
Can any one corroborate what you have said?
The Cold Case tv show doesn't work like that in real life.
- David
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Oh, I can tell you exactly: somewhere in Canberra, swimming in amniotic fluid.
I think there are plenty of reasons to think that someone would remember something that happened back then, particularly if it involved (or didn't involve) a sexual encounter. There may have been other things happening that night, like a party or a school trip (one presumes that the woman's police complaint contained such details). How many men do you know who don't have a clear memory of their teenage sexual experiences?
I think there are plenty of reasons to think that someone would remember something that happened back then, particularly if it involved (or didn't involve) a sexual encounter. There may have been other things happening that night, like a party or a school trip (one presumes that the woman's police complaint contained such details). How many men do you know who don't have a clear memory of their teenage sexual experiences?
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
Yes. It's a political issue, not a legal one.David wrote:^ I think that's the one thing here that's close to 100% certain: sooner or later, one way or the other, the accused's name will come out, and he will have to confront this allegation publicly in some way.
Since the woman was apparently only 16 at the time, it may be (depending upon the then age of the alleged rapist) that no issue of consent would arise. As I said previously, it depends upon the detail of the particular story in this case and the extent to which it is verifiable.
I think criminal prosecution - although it can't be ruled out by any of us who don't know the content of the allegation - is unlikely but the problem for the Government is that until a name comes out, there are 15 (more or less) innocent Ministers under a cloud.
- stui magpie
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The age consent in The ACT is 16, so assuming the law was the same in 1988 the age of the alleged rapist at the time is irrelevant to consent being able to be given.
And yes, this is now completely a political issue.
And yes, this is now completely a political issue.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
- eddiesmith
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So you have no witnesses that saw you doing that?David wrote:Oh, I can tell you exactly: somewhere in Canberra, swimming in amniotic fluid.
I think there are plenty of reasons to think that someone would remember something that happened back then, particularly if it involved (or didn't involve) a sexual encounter. There may have been other things happening that night, like a party or a school trip (one presumes that the woman's police complaint contained such details). How many men do you know who don't have a clear memory of their teenage sexual experiences?
https://apo.org.au/sites/default/files/ ... d41113.pdfstui magpie wrote:The age consent in The ACT is 16, so assuming the law was the same in 1988 the age of the alleged rapist at the time is irrelevant to consent being able to be given.
And yes, this is now completely a political issue.
Go for it. It looks like they abolished the death penalty for rape in the ACT in 1968, so that's one thing off the table.
- eddiesmith
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- stui magpie
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WTF are you on?Pies4shaw wrote:https://apo.org.au/sites/default/files/ ... d41113.pdfstui magpie wrote:The age consent in The ACT is 16, so assuming the law was the same in 1988 the age of the alleged rapist at the time is irrelevant to consent being able to be given.
And yes, this is now completely a political issue.
Go for it. It looks like they abolished the death penalty for rape in the ACT in 1968, so that's one thing off the table.
She was 16, the age of consent is 16, she was able to provide consent regardless of how much older the other party was.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
That's a bit unnecessary, Stui. You posted on the basis that you were "assuming the law was the same in 1988". All I did was link a Commonwealth report that purports to goes through the history of some relevant offences in each Australian jurisdiction and might contain an answer to the issue you raised - because I wasn't that interested in it.
- eddiesmith
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- stui magpie
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^
Yep. They have officially declared the case closed.
Samantha Maiden should give lessons on how to write good factual investigative pieces. Like this.
https://www.news.com.au/national/politi ... 7075284bbf
Apart from the detail on the case being closed it provides some more detail on the 2 people involved.
Taken from what is there, they moved in same/similar circles, had mutual friends and had socialised together previously. My reading is he was clearly older but not necessarily by much. 2-6 years would be my guess.
On the night in question they allegedly went out in Kings Cross for drinks and dancing. I know from experience that there wasn't much checking for age back in those days.
Again, allegedly, they ended up together where she consented to a sex act but declined oral or vaginal sex. He allegedly forced her to perform oral sex then anally raped her.
David, considering the escalation in these sexual cases, including now news that the SA parliament has roaming hands everywhere, any possibility of consolidating the related content into one thread and leave WPT to throw rocks at Scomo in this one?
Yep. They have officially declared the case closed.
Samantha Maiden should give lessons on how to write good factual investigative pieces. Like this.
https://www.news.com.au/national/politi ... 7075284bbf
Apart from the detail on the case being closed it provides some more detail on the 2 people involved.
Taken from what is there, they moved in same/similar circles, had mutual friends and had socialised together previously. My reading is he was clearly older but not necessarily by much. 2-6 years would be my guess.
On the night in question they allegedly went out in Kings Cross for drinks and dancing. I know from experience that there wasn't much checking for age back in those days.
Again, allegedly, they ended up together where she consented to a sex act but declined oral or vaginal sex. He allegedly forced her to perform oral sex then anally raped her.
David, considering the escalation in these sexual cases, including now news that the SA parliament has roaming hands everywhere, any possibility of consolidating the related content into one thread and leave WPT to throw rocks at Scomo in this one?
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.