• @doingthestuff
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    546 months ago

    He’s unquestionably a rapist, but he is not a convicted rapist.

    • @Cruxifux
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      206 months ago

      Nope, just of sexual abuse. Which is, like…. Come on New York what’s the fucking difference here? Especially when you hear the story of what happened. I don’t understand how they talked the court down from rape to sexual abuse.

        • @nomous
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          6 months ago

          My understanding is that she wasn’t able to say with 100% certainty that he put his penis inside her; that it could have been his finger.

          Which I’m sure is something his lawyers push but is still a pretty sick burn to have on-record, and actually lines up with what his other victims say.

    • @db2
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      106 months ago

      Yet.

    • @Daft_ish
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      6 months ago

      Semantics. Some might classify the sexual assault he preformed as rape.

      • Natanael
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        106 months ago

        No, it’s because the finding was made in civil court, not criminal court, therefore not convicted.

        • @Daft_ish
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          6 months ago

          Huh? You can be convicted in civil court…

          • @gingernate
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            46 months ago

            A conviction leads to sentencing (normally) in a criminal matter. A cival court is settling a cival matter, not a criminal one. Criminal courts convict you of a crime and sentence you to some kind of punishment. Cival courts can make you pay a fine, but not convict you of a crime.

            • @Daft_ish
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              6 months ago

              Again, another argument of semantics.

              Would change nothing for me, maybe for yourself, to say Donald Trump was found liable of sexual assault by a judge and jury in the court of law.

              Edit:

              You keep obfuscating, though.

              • @gingernate
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                26 months ago

                Sure, he’s a rapist. But not a convicted rapist. That’s all that’s being said

              • Schadrach
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                6 months ago

                That would be a more accurate statement, yes.

                But there’s more to it than just semantics. There’s also the level of certainty - civil trials have a dramatically lower standard of evidence than criminal trials.

                So when you say he’s been convicted of rape, you’re saying that 12 people were convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed rape. But that’s not the case - instead a judge was convinced it was at least slightly more likely than not that he committed rape. That’s a very different standard.

  • @jaybone
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    96 months ago

    He looks very much like a hunchback in this picture.