The Palm Beach Post

Case shows deck is stacked against many rape plaintiffs

- She writes for the Kansas City Star.

Mary Sanchez

A woman’s life is about to become a virtual hell, thanks to the legal maneuverin­gs of NBA star Derrick Rose.

She can count on it because the public still reacts with scorn toward women who accuse famous men of sexual assault.

Rose won the legal right to use the woman’s name in a civil trial in which he is accused of rape, scheduled to begin Oct. 4. The pseudonym Jane Doe will cease to shield her. The 30-year-old college student will be identified in proceeding­s, which opens her to levels of scrutiny and fury that Rose will not face. That fact alone takes a moment to digest.

The woman has accused Rose of raping her in 2013 along with two buddies after she passed out. Rose and the woman had been in a consensual, non-exclusive sexual relationsh­ip for nearly two years. But, she alleges, that changed in August 2013 after she had left the New York Knick’s rental house in Los Angeles drunk and possibly drugged.

Her name exposed, the woman will soon be easy prey for any slug with an internet connection.

Rose’s legal strategy appears to be to leverage this reality to get her to settle her $21.5 million civil suit.

This is how we shame women who allege sexual assault. It often works because the public will be more than willing participan­ts.

That being said, there is also a forceful argument that shielding the identities of sexual assault victims mutes the public response to such crimes. That argument was made most forcefully in 1989 by Geneva Overholser, the brave editor of the Des Moines Register, published a column arguing that anonymity harms rape victims and mutes public outrage at the crime.

She wasn’t wrong, but she was writing before the advent of viral social media.

Her arguments continue to be persuasive. She wondered in 2003 whether the media’s hesitancy to name names — indeed it is an institutio­nalized rule — has “prolonged the stigma and fed the underrepor­ting.”

The myths about rape continue partly because truths about the crime are shielded as well. And when its victims are nameless and faceless, that leaves a vacuum for assumption­s.

In a less sexist world, a woman could make an allegation and expect the known facts either to prove or disprove the contention.

Only what happened would matter. Was there consent or not? But that’s not the world that we live in.

It should be noted that the judge has put Rose and his legal team on notice for shaming.

“Defendant Rose appears to suggest that women who publicly portray themselves as ‘sexual’ are less likely to experience embarrassm­ent, humiliatio­n and harassment associated with gang rape,” the judge wrote in an earlier order.

The judge can control only so much: the actions of defendant and plaintiff, jurors and those who attend the proceeding­s. The narratives of sexual assault still divide the public in unhelpful ways. Some people are so uneasy with the details that they prefer the muting of anonymous victims. Others take to social media and eagerly attack the victim further. And that leaves victims wondering if they’re better off not coming forward to seek justice.

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