Gang-rape retrial needs dose of realism
JOSEPH N. BELL
I’ve dealt only briefly in this space with the local gang-rape case
-- I had to fight off calling it the Haidl rape case, a label several
Forum letter writers properly objected to -- mostly because so much
has already been written about it and will continue to be now that
the decision has been made for a second trial.
Then it occurred to me that the continuing vitriolic level of
public anger and outrage is, in itself, a matter worth examining.
Letters to the editor trash the jurors who came within one vote of
exonerating the three young men accused of the crime. The families of
the three defendants are repeatedly blistered. Public protests are
being planned during the second trial.
The anger this case has generated seems to have a life of its own.
It has not abated but increased with time. The participants on both
sides have enthusiastically contributed to this climate. The
defendants and their attorneys have waggled a symbolic index finger
in the face of society, flaunting their wealth with such excesses as
hiring jurors from the first trial to act as consultants to the
defense in the second. Greg Haidl has carried both arrogance and
stupidity to breathtaking heights by using his freedom on bail to
incite a new charge of statutory rape of a victim he allegedly met at
a party his father threw to celebrate the mistrial decision.
Meanwhile, the prosecutors -- who will probably never again have a
case handed them with a videotape of the crime being committed and
overwhelming public support for their efforts to convict -- botched
up the case in many creative ways, but three in particular. They
chose to prosecute charges carrying penalties any law student could
have predicted would never be imposed by a jury. And instead of
breaking the case down into three individual trials in which Haidl’s
behavior and visibility would be dealt with separately, they made the
job of the defense easier by lumping them together. They also were
reportedly overmatched in courtroom technique.
The prosecutors will correct two of these shortcomings in the
second trial. The defendants will still be tried as a group, but the
new charges are much more realistic, and a high-profile trial
attorney will beef up the prosecution team. Meanwhile, at this
writing, Greg Haidl is still at large but under judicial restraints,
most of which should have been self-imposed a long time ago.
Since I continue to be one of those angry, outraged people, I
decided to turn to my friendly, neighborhood shrink Joseph Pursch, to
ask why the community level of rage over this case continues to have
such strong legs?
He said such cases touch people in a wide variety of emotional
places “that make it almost impossible to get through their anger to
an objective view of what happened. This is especially frightening to
the parents of female children because it tells them they can no
longer expect that men -- and especially the peers of their children
-- will exercise either the strength or good sense to back away from
inappropriate sex that can escalate to sexual abuse.
“It also greatly upsets parents who really work at teaching their
children of both sexes responsible social behavior to see the
immature, spoiled children of the wealthy and powerful consistently
getting away with the opposite,” he said. “And that resentment grows
when the parent is a public official.
“It grows even more when the perpetrators become convinced that no
matter what they do, nothing bad will happen to them. You and I --
and hopefully our kids -- don’t do the things that entitlement
junkies do because we learn to tie our behavior to consequences. But
such junkies have learned from personal experience not to worry about
accountability because they have repeatedly gotten away with similar
behavior. So they do whatever they feel like doing.”
The testimony in our local gang-rape trial was full of examples of
such behavior. And as I read the daily accounts in the Pilot, two
questions began to nag at me with growing persistence.
First, have the parallels between the behavior of these three
defendants and the treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison in
Baghdad been apparent to anyone besides me? I’m aware that the victim
in the rape case was present by choice and the Abu Ghraib victims
were prisoners. But in both instances, the people holding the power
used it to humiliate victims. And in both instances, those in power
enjoyed this demeaning of another human being so gleefully that they
photographed it to share with their friends.
And, second, if the personal history of the victim in the local
rape case can be exhumed and trashed in open court, why isn’t the
antisocial behavior of Greg Haidl of equal significance in showing
motivation for his actions?
These are impractical and emotional questions that will have no
place in the new trial. Instead, once again, Pursch says “people will
be dealing with their own fears and saying that the victim could have
been my daughter. Or me. And agonizing over the propriety of putting
an alleged victim -- especially if she is underage -- in the position
of co-conspirator by asking if she could possibly have consented to
this sort of behavior.”
One question will surely be answered in the rerun of this sordid
mess: whether the lesson of accountability will penetrate the lives
of these three defendants, whatever the result. If any of them have
shown contrition or recognition that their behavior was
reprehensible, it has not been apparent in published reports. This,
of course, is the primary responsibility of their parents and not the
society in which they live.
Society enters the picture only if their behavior is criminal.
That’s what the second trial will once again address, hopefully from
a more realistic perspective.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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