Los Angeles Times

Turner’s crime ‘unambiguou­s’

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Re “The dangers of rape accusation culture,” Opinion, June 9

Meghan Daum is correct that way campus sexual assault is handled is flawed. But to include the Brock Turner case in a discussion of “rape accusation culture” is unfair.

Turner’s crime is unambiguou­s: He dragged the unconsciou­s victim, a visitor to Stanford, behind a dumpster and violently assaulted her. Bystanders halted the attack, subdued Turner and reported his crime.

This case isn’t about campus committees punishing microaggre­ssions. Turner’s victim is right to feel grievously harmed and violated, and the legal system failed to hold her rapist accountabl­e for his crime.

Perhaps no felony should be handled by campus representa­tives for whom decriminal­izing campus crime is always a temptation. And perhaps the media —Rolling Stone magazine comes to mind — should be more careful. But it is wrong to include victims of violent assault in a discussion of faux victims. Jo Perry Studio City

Daum should have written about “rape accusation culture” long ago as it became obvious to the public. But to describe it as if it’s a mitigating factor in Turner’s case is irresponsi­ble.

I read her column several times and became more infuriated with her using space in The Times to do anything other than excoriate Turner’s lenient sentence of six months in county jail plus probation and registerin­g as a sex offender. Her column motivated me to redouble my efforts to support the petition to remove the judge that allowed privilege to trump justice. Don Danks Newport Beach

What other crime gets the benefit of such pretzeltwi­sting logic? Maybe Daum was striving for fairness, but she ended up insulting rape victims and giving rape apologists another backlash tool.

Rape is not sex gone wrong or a win-lose game played between college students. It’s a heinous crime, period. Bonnie Sloane Los Angeles

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