REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, WASHINGTON -- Sebagian besar kasus rudapaksaan atau pelecehan seksual di Amerika Serikat ternyata tidak dilaporkan ke pihak kepolisian. Hal ini membuat pelaku rudapaksaan masih bebas berkeliaran.
Organisasi nasional AS untuk anti kekerasan seksual yakni Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN) mencatat 54 persen kasus pelecehan seksual tidak dilaporkan ke polisi. Akhirnya, 97 persen pelaku pelecehan tidak pernah di penjara.
Setiap 100 kasus rudapaksaan, RANN menyatakan 46 kasusnya dilaporkan ke polisi. Namun, hanya 12 pelaku yang ditahan. Dari jumlah itu, sembilan diantaranya dituntut di pengadilan.
Dari jumlah yang dituntut lima diantaranya diyakini berbuat kejahatan. Namun, hanya tiga orang diantaranya yang dipenjara meskipun hanya satu hari. Dengan itu, 97 pelaku dari 100 kasus rudapaksaan bebas berkeliaran dan bisa jadi mengincar korban baru.
Masih dari sumber yang sama, 17,7 juta wanita AS pernah menjadi korban percobaan atau rudapaksaan. Sementara itu, satu dari enam wanita AS pernah menjadi korban rudapaksaan. Dari jumlah itu, 2,8 persen menjadi korban percobaan rudapaksaan.
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ini sumber berita akurat dan terpercaya gak sih??
soalnya berdasarkan asumsi teman2 aku, korban rudapaksaan terbesar adanya di arab dan berdasakan asumsi temanku juga korban2 disana ga berani laporin pelaku rudapaksaan
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court orders new trial in rape of sleeping woman
She thought attacker was her boyfriend, but court says 1872 impersonation law applies only to married women.
Because a 19th-century state law does not explicitly protect unmarried rape victims from attackers pretending to be a boyfriend, a California appeals court Thursday overturned a man's conviction for having sex with a sleeping woman.
The 2nd District Court of Appeal in Los Angeles ordered a new trial for Julio Morales, who was convicted of raping a friend's 18-year-old sister in Cerritos after a party in February 2009. He was sentenced to three years in prison.
Here's how the court's opinion, which includes details of the encounter, framed the case:
A man enters the dark bedroom of an unmarried woman after seeing her boyfriend leave late at night, and has sexual intercourse with the woman while pretending to be the boyfriend. Has the man committed rape? Because of historical anomalies in the law and the statutory definition of rape, the answer is no, even though, if the woman had been married and the man had impersonated her husband, the answer would be yes.
Morales' first trial ended in a hung jury. Jurors in the second trial convicted him of rape of an unconscious person after prosecutors told them they could find him guilty under two conditions: either the victim was sleeping, unconscious or not able to refuse sex, or else the attacker misled her or lied about his identify. Under California law, however, impersonation applies only if a woman is married.
The three-judge appellate panel reversed the conviction, saying it "cannot discern from this record whether the jury convicted defendant on the correct or incorrect theory."
The opinion states that the law allows the "continued existence of a separate provision that expressly makes sexual intercourse by impersonation a rape, albeit only when the victim is married and the perpetrator impersonates the victim's spouse."
"Therefore, we reluctantly hold that a person who accomplishes sexual intercourse by impersonating someone other than a married victim‟s spouse is not guilty of the crime of rape of an unconscious person" under a provision of state law, Justice Thomas Willhite wrote for the panel.
The justices noted that state courts "have been inconsistent when characterizing sex crimes involving impersonation" and that "there appears to be little discussion in the legislative history" about what the Legislature really intended.
For a report with a little more attitude, see the LA Weekly.
Friday, a state lawmaker said he would reintroduce legislation next week to expand the 1872 law to protect unmarried women or men who do not live together.
"Californians are justifiably outraged by this court ruling, and it is important that the Legislature join together to close whatever loopholes may exist in the law and uphold justice for rape victims," Assemblyman Katcho Achadjian, a Republican from San Luis Obispo, said in a news release.
The state Assembly passed his measure last year but it died in the Senate Public Safety Committee.