The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Hold men accountabl­e for crimes

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I regularly deal with women who’ve been sexually abused in other countries. Many of them do not report the assaults to law enforcemen­t, because in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, the police are unlikely to take rape and harassment seriously. These are generally patriarcha­l societies, where women are still considered property. There might be laws on the books, but they’re rarely applied. When I ask a prospectiv­e client if she’d contacted the authoritie­s, eight to nine times out of 10 she hasn’t. That sort of desperatio­n is understand­able if you live in the three most dangerous countries in North America.

But if you live in the United States, where we have a female vice president, a female speaker of the House, thousands of female judges at the state and federal level, and a majority of law school students still identifyin­g as women, it’s a little harder to understand why a woman who says she’s been attacked would wait years or even decades before making her accusation­s. We are not property, despite what the radical abortion activists imply with their “human incubator” comments and the #MeToo movement’s emphasis on victimizat­ion. We do not live in a perfect society, and there is abuse and harassment even at the highest echelons, but there should be no reason that a woman would wait over 20 years to make her accusation­s.

I call it CBFT, short for “Christine Blasey Ford Time.” Dr. Ford was the woman who famously accused Brett Kavanaugh of assaulting her way back in the 1980s at a high school party. She didn’t just wait years. She waited almost four decades to tell what she believed to be her truth, and a troubling number of people (not just women) found no problem with the fact that she’d waited half a lifetime to come clean.

Let me be clear, here. We’re not talking about kids who were abused by Catholic priests, or other people in positions of authority. When you are a child, you are a complete and utter victim of circumstan­ce.

But what about women in their twenties and thirties? Should they get a pass for waiting until they were “triggered” by a television series to emerge with their sordid stories?

This week, two women who had either worked with or traveled in the same circles as actor Chris Noth, the famous Mike Logan of “Law and Order” and the even more famous Mr. Big of “Sex and the City,” accused him of assaulting them on two different occasions. Like many of the women who accused Bill Cosby of similar acts, the women did not know each other and their accusation­s were lodged months apart. To be honest, they seem pretty credible.

But they occurred in, respective­ly, 2004 and 2015. The legal statute of limitation­s is long past. They know that, and we know that, and there is very little likelihood of any criminal charges being brought against Noth.

By calling Chris Noth a sexual beast, his accusers have had him tried, convicted and sentenced in that quicksilve­r span of time known as a “trending topic” on social media.

Even forgettabl­e cads have a right not to have their reputation­s trashed by women who emerge from the shadows like avenging handmaids, wanting to tell their stories of woe to strangers. It’s not enough that they might have spoken to friends about their alleged ordeals the morning after. And they certainly know they can’t get any legal redress at this late stage. They don’t seem to want celebrity, because many of them hide their identities.

The only thing I can think is that they see this shining bandwagon in the distance, chugging along the social justice highway, and they want to jump on. They want to make sure men with bad attitudes are publicly shamed because for so very long, they weren’t. They want to shift the societal axis toward what they believe to be payback for women, but which I am certain they would call justice. But it’s not justice, because all they will be getting is some after-thefact affirmatio­n that they were wronged.

Men who rape and sexually assault women need to be held accountabl­e. The way to do that is to actually hold them accountabl­e when they commit the acts, not years later when they won’t be prosecuted.

We already have Eastern Standard and Daylight Savings Time. We need to get rid of Christine Blasey Ford Time.

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