Sarah’s News Roundup 02.03.18

Mark Salling
Mark Salling, best know for his role on Glee, commit suicide by hanging.

He was found near the LA River and pronounced dead at the scene.

Salling had pleaded guilty for possessing child pornography/images of child sexual abuse in October 2017 and was due to be sentenced in March.

He had over 50,000 images on his laptop and hard drive and was facing up to seven years in prison.

Benjamin Petty
Benjamin Petty, a blind man who brutally raped a 13-year-old girl at a church camp where he worked as a cook in Murray County in 2016, will not go to prison because he is legally blind.

Petty tied her wrists with rope, raped her vaginally, anally and “by instrumentation”, and threatened her not to tell anybody.

Incredibly, she did tell someone only for him to enter into a negotiated guilty plea.

Her parents accepted this because his “medical condition” (ie being blind) meant he would “not serve any meaningful prison time”.

Instead, he received three 15 year suspended sentences during which he must wear an ankle monitor for 24 months, register as a sex offender and undergo treatment.

The girl’s parents filed a civil lawsuit last year against the camp and the church that runs it, however camp/church attorneys want to interview her about her history of “voluntary sexual activity” as they claim to have spoken to other campers about the girl’s “sexual activities” with her boyfriend.

The family’s attorney called this “victim-blaming” and rejected the request.

Larry Nassar
The number of girls known to have been sexually abused by USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar has increased to 265.

This week more survivors confronted him in court as they gave their victim impact statements in the last of three sentencing hearings.

Randall Margraves, whose three daughters were abused by Nassar, tried to attack him in court and needed to be restrained by security.

He later apologised and was told he would not face charges.

Nassar will be sentenced by Eaton County Circuit Judge Janice Cunningham.

It is expected he will have a minimum of 25 – 40 years added to his 175 year sentence.

Hillary Clinton said she should have fired Burns Strider
Hillary Clinton said she should have fired Burns Strider, an adviser who was accused of sexual harassment during her 2008 presidential campaign.

Strider had his pay cut and was told to seek counselling however he was accused of sexual harassment a second time and was fired then.

Hillary explained: “I didn’t think firing him was the best solution to the problem. He needed to be punished, change his behaviour, and understand why his actions were wrong. The young woman needed to thrive and feel safe. I thought both could happen without him losing his job. The fact that she felt heard and supported reinforced my belief that the process worked – at least to a degree.”

Hillary has “reached out” to the woman concerned.

Rose McGowan has given more details about being sexually assaulted by Harvey Weinstein in both a five-part documentary
Rose McGowan has given more details about being sexually assaulted by Harvey Weinstein in both a five-part documentary, Citizen Rose, and a book, Brave.

She refers to Weinstein as “the monster”: “You’re beneath humanity. You don’t even get a name. Loser.”

Weinstein still denies all allegations.

Scotland a bill to criminalise psychological domestic abuse has been passed
In Scotland a bill to criminalise psychological domestic abuse has been passed.

The Domestic Abuse Bill creates a special offence of “abusive behaviour in relation to a partner or ex-partner” and includes psychological abuse such as coercive and controlling behaviour as well as physical and sexual violence.

Dr Marsha Scott, CEO of Scottish Women’s Aid, said: “Women have been telling us for 40 years that it is psychological and emotional abuse that is the most traumatic for them and the hardest to recover from, yet for such a long time we had absolutely no tools in legislation to take their stories seriously and hold abusers accountable for the untold harm that they wreak.

It (the bill) does not blame women and it does not mean women have to come into court and prove how harmed they have been by the abuse.

In fact it is all structured in looking at the behaviour of the perpetrator and asking ‘would a reasonable person think that this could be harmful?’.”

Sarah x

#icantkeepquiet

#metoo

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