Saturday 12 June 2010

Say, Maybe The Police Will Be Less Keen To Arrest...

...on spurious 'rape' cases, now it's affected one of their own?
A mother of three who falsely accused a police officer of rape after he rejected her advances following a one-night stand was today jailed for two years.
She wasn't exactly a catch, either:
Carter, a single mum, who has three sons by two different men, continued her lies for four months during police investigations.

She only admitted the truth after officers confronted her with the text messages she had sent to the long-serving police constable, blaming her actions on ‘stress’.
Ah, of course.
Judge Julian Hall blasted Carter saying she had ‘betrayed the sisterhood’ and accused her of making it easier for real rapists to be acquitted.

He added: ‘The offence you committed has effects on all sorts of levels.

‘It is difficult to imagine a worse situation for a serving police officer than to be accused of rape. In his victim statement he talks about losing weight and taking time off work.’
The 'sisterhood'..?

Well, thanks for nothing, judge! I've no kinship with this wretched creature just because we are both women. I expect a lot of other women will say the same.

So how about you put down the sociology textbook and the latest comminique on rape theory from Harriet Harman, now she's no longer in charge, and do the job you're paid for?
‘What you did also had a much wider impact. Government ministers and social commentators talk about the very low conviction rate [for rape].

‘These people also talk as if false complaints of rape are frequently made but they are able to say this because people like you occasionally do.’
It's a bit more than 'occasionally', as well you - and the police - know.

If not for the politically driven agendas of a bunch of feminist crackpots, and the attention that is paid to them by appeasers in government, we'd not need to keep pointing that out.
Lucy Tapper, mitigating, said: ‘In cases like these there are only ever losers. She will suffer the stigma for what she has done and will be vilified and perhaps deservedly so.’
'Perhaps'..? I don't think there's any 'perhaps' about it, Lucy sweetie...

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I suppose we can overlook the odd crass statement mumbled by a senile Judge.

Hang on it's Julian Hall, the weekend money launderer for a large drugs cartel. He of the crocodilian tears who recommends paedophiles compensate victims with a shiny new bicycle.

So no surprises there, Julia.

English Viking said...

How come she got 2 years (quite rightly so) but if memory serves me correctly, none of the other cases you have highlighted recently received a custodial sentence?

Oh, that's right. It's far more serious when the accused is Babylon.

Foxy Brown said...

Yet another example of why men accused of rape should be granted anonymity.

blueknight said...

..Yet another example of why men accused of rape should be granted anonymity..(Foxy)
Correct. This used to be the case until a dangerous rapist was at large and the Police were in the awkward position of not being able to identify him in the papers or put him on a wanted poster.
Of course those situations are quite rare and there could be some mechanism for permission to name a rape suspect if various criteria was to apply.
Does this entitle the man to a free go when she gets out?

JuliaM said...

"He of the crocodilian tears who recommends paedophiles compensate victims with a shiny new bicycle."

Yikes! I thought this was an exaggeration until I googled him...!

"How come she got 2 years (quite rightly so) but if memory serves me correctly, none of the other cases you have highlighted recently received a custodial sentence?"

Answered your own question there, I think...

"Yet another example of why men accused of rape should be granted anonymity."

Indeed. Let's hope someone is bringing these cases - ALL of these cases - to Theresa's attention...

"Correct. This used to be the case until a dangerous rapist was at large and the Police were in the awkward position of not being able to identify him in the papers or put him on a wanted poster.
Of course those situations are quite rare and there could be some mechanism for permission to name a rape suspect if various criteria was to apply."


Quite.

I've seen the Warbouys case mentioned many times by the MadFems, but to be honest, women who'd accept a drink from a strange taxi driver while in the cab..?

There's nothing that's going to work for women that dim...