The Denver Post

DuPont heirwouldn’t “farewell” in prison

- EMILY BAZELON Slate

What is wrong with Delaware Judge Jan Jurden, who last week gave a DuPont heir, Robert H. Richards IV, probation for raping his 3-year-old daughter? In her mind-boggling order suspending Richards’ eight-year prison sentence, Jurden gave one rationale that should launch a tidal wave of hate mail: Richards “will not fare well” in prison. To ask the obvious, so what?

There are three crucial justificat­ions for criminal punishment: retributio­n, deterrence and rehabilita­tion. It’s the first two of those goals that should be front and center when the crime is the sexual abuse of a child, with the welfare of the rapist coming in a distant third. Probation for raping a child is the kind of leniency that gives mercy a terrible name.

It’s also part of a disturbing pattern of late in which judges treat sexual assault crimes as worthy only of a slap on the wrist. There’s the case of Austin Smith Clem, an Alabama man who was convicted of raping his neighbor when she was 14 and 18. Judge JamesWoodr­oof suspended Clem’s 40-year prison sentence in full, sending him to a community correction­s program instead. When the state appeals court ordered a resentenci­ng, Woodroof doubled down, still refusing to send Clem to prison and even reducing his suspended sentence. And inMontana last August, Judge G. Todd Baugh suspended all but 30 days of a 15-year prison sentence for Stacey Dean Rambold, a former teacher convicted of having sex with one of his students, who was 14 at the time and committed suicide two years later. Rambold walked away with this light punishment even though he’d already violated the rules of a sex-offender treatment program not to have unsupervis­ed contact with children (by having visits with minors who were his relatives). Baugh had the gall to say in court that the teen-age student was “as much in control of the situation” as her teacher was, and “older than her chronologi­cal age.” After a petition circulated for his removal, he apologized for his remarks but defended the sentence he gave.

As Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick wrote about Baugh and his ilk, “these are judges who find ways to empathize with the accused and to shift blame and consequenc­es onto the victims.” Much of the time, the problem seems to start with the notion that the crimes were nonviolent. “It was not a violent, forcible, beat-the-victim rape, like you see in the movies,” Baugh said of Rambold’s conviction for sexual intercours­e without consent.

Then there is Jared Remy, son of former Red Sox player and Boston celebrity Jerry Remy, who as the Boston Globe recently reported, was in court 19 times, mostly for beating or stalking women he was dating. Each time the lawyer his family paid for persuaded the judge to go easy on Jared Remy, until he was finally arrested for allegedly stabbing his girlfriend to death. Why did he keep avoiding jail time? Maybe because his victims were women he knew, or maybe because of his wealth and family connection­s. Probably a bit of both.

Richards, who had no previous record, also has the benefit of money and family connection­s. He pleaded guilty to one count of fourth-degree rape after his daughter told her grandmothe­r, at the age of 5, that she didn’t want “my daddy touching me anymore.” (Richards was convicted in 2009— the details of the case are only coming out now because of a lawsuit his ex-wife recently filed against him.) In Delaware, fourthdegr­ee rape is characteri­zed as a violent felony, and the sentencing range goes up to 15 years in prison. But Jurden seems to have decided to treat Richards primarily as a patient, noting that he had “significan­t treatment needs which must be met.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States