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Rape Victims Have Been Failed By Our Legal System For Too Long

The decision by our NSW Labor government to reform the rape laws is welcome but overdue. Probably about 100 years overdue.

According to  "Girls Like You" by Paul Sheehan only  1 in 100 perpetrators of sexual assault in Australia  end up in gaol.

A victim may  not report sexual assault because she does not want the trauma of a court case, or  the embarrassment  of recounting the event in a police interview, or she is in fear of her attacker, or  she  fears she  will not be believed.

If she does report it the police may not believe her or they may not pursue the case.

If they do pursue the case the attacker may not be apprehended.

If the attacker is apprehended, the police may not consider it worth taking the case  to court because they estimate a low chance of conviction.

If the case goes to court, due to character assassination and intimidation of the victim by the defence attorney,  the attacker may not be found not guilty.

In no other area of law is there such a statistical gap between commission of a crime and a conviction.

What would the outrage  be if only 1 in 100 motorists who were photographed going through a red light camera got a fine?

When it comes to that what would be the outrage  if only 1 in 100 of the legal aid lawyers who defend rapists got paid?

Under muslim sharia law in Nigeria recently a man was sentenced  to death by stoning for the rape of his 15 year old stepdaughter. She in turn got 100 strokes of the cane for being raped.

In enlightened countries like Australia rape victims don't get caned, they are only forced to be  humiliated, traumatised, defamed and psychologically scarred by unscrupulous defence lawyers intent on destroying them in trials that can drag on  for years.

If these victims had the choice they'd probably prefer a quick 100 lashes as long as  they saw their attackers locked up.

The low conviction rate for sexual assault and the way the odds are stacked against the victim demands reform.

One solution might  be  to offer perpetrators a substantial  discount in sentence for a guilty plea to save victims the harrowing experience of a trial. This  might upset those who love screaming for tougher sentences, but we'd jail more rapists that way.

Statement issued June 18th, 2007 on behalf of One Nation (NSW Division)
By Bob Vinnicombe Publicity Officer
For more information ring Bob Vinnicombe 0407949963 / (02) 96454910

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