The Lessons of the Maryville Rape Case
Viewing it solely through the lens of gender politics obscures the real issues and ultimately endangers justice.
Maryville, Mo., has become the latest battleground in the culture war over rape. A Kansas City Star report on a troubling tale in which two popular high school athletes charged with sexual offenses against a 14-year-old girl went free while the girl and her family were shunned and harassed has ignited a storm of outrage. As a result, the case is now being reexamined, with a special prosecutor appointed to investigate. Those of us who have criticized the radical zealotry of the feminist war on "rape culture" must acknowledge that in this instance, the activists are likely helping a good cause. But viewing the Maryville story solely through the lens of gender politics obscures the real issues—and ultimately endangers justice.
Some have dubbed Maryville "another Steubenville," referring to the recent Ohio case dogged by the perception that local authorities were shielding popular young jocks from accountability for rape. But that belief, as Ariel Levy's New Yorker article last August made clear, was based on fiction far more than fact (the prosecution of the two perpetrators was always firmly on track). In Maryville, the grounds for such claims seem far more solid. Felony charges against Matthew Barnett, accused of assaulting the girl when she was incapacitated after being plied with liquor, and Jordan Zech, who allegedly filmed the act with a cellphone, were dropped despite evidence that the county sheriff believes warranted prosecution.
The facts as recounted in The Star are indeed shocking. After the alleged assault, the girl—Daisy Coleman, who has publicly identified herself—was dumped on the porch of her house clad in T-shirt and sweatpants in the freezing cold, and found barely conscious by her mother, Melinda. (While Daisy had certainly behaved recklessly, sneaking away from a sleepover with a 13-year-old friend to party with older boys, this is no excuse for the boys' actions.) The misdemeanor endangerment charge was also eventually dropped—due, prosecutor Robert Rice claims, to Daisy and Melinda's lack of cooperation. The backlash against the Colemans—Daisy and her brother were taunted at school and in the social media, Melinda lost her job at a veterinary clinic—eventually caused the family to move.
Writing in The Nation, lawyer and feminist blogger Jill Filipovic uses the case to blast a 1999 Supreme Court ruling striking down a portion of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), which would have allowed victims of "gender-based violence" to sue in federal court for a civil rights remedy. To Filipovic, Daisy Coleman is clearly a victim not only of injustice but of entrenched misogyny.
But is it that simple? A few caveats are in order.
First, Maryville residents who believe there was a miscarriage of justice in this case blame small-town politics and favoritism, not sexism. Both boys are from powerful local families; Barnett is the grandson of a prominent politician. The mother of Daisy's 13-year-old friend, who was also coerced into unwanted sex at the party (with the perpetrator sentenced as a juvenile), has said that if one of her sons had been the offender, he would have been locked up for years. The Colemans' status as relative outsiders in Maryville played a role as well; the second girl, according to her mother, received much more sympathy.
Second, we do not yet know the full story. Sheriff Darren White, whom the Kansas City Star depicted as favorable to the Colemans' side, has harshly criticized Melinda Coleman in an interview with CBS News' Crimesider web edition and disputed much of her account, asserting that the charges were dismissed because of her and Daisy's uncooperative attitude. Is White covering for the local "good ole boys" or telling the truth? Perhaps the investigation will tell. Both White and Coleman's former boss also assert that Coleman's firing had nothing to do with the scandal and preceded the alleged sexual assault.
Which brings us to a third caveat: It is, at this point, an alleged assault. While Daisy Coleman's severely intoxicated state that night is not in doubt, there are conflicting accounts of when she reached such a state. New York criminal defense attorney Joseph DiBenedetto has rightly taken heat for his remark on Fox News, "What did she expect to happen at 1 a.m. in the morning after sneaking out?" (though he may have been trying to say that a girl sneaking out at night to party with boys is likely doing it with sexual intent, not "asking" to be raped). But DiBenedetto had a point—however uncomfortable—when he noted that a teenager caught in a compromising situation has a motive to lie about rape; it is a fairly typical rape-hoax scenario. The evidence reported so far strongly suggests that Coleman was assaulted; but, once again, we do not yet know all the facts. The mere fact that she has reiterated her claims on a feminist website does not—as New York magazine blogger Kat Stoeffel seems to think—prove their veracity. (Stoeffel uncritically repeats Coleman's assertion that she had no romantic interest in Barnett and saw him only as her older brother's friend; but in fact, her brother has said that he was bothered by Daisy's texting relationship with the older boy and tried to stop it.)
All that said, Daisy Coleman deserves a fair hearing from the justice system; on that score, the activists are absolutely right. But will they ever be satisfied with any outcome not in the accuser's favor? In her Nation article, Filipovic laments that if the special prosecutor does not reinstate the charges, Coleman will have little legal recourse without VAWA's civil rights provision. Thus, a decision not to greenlight the case will still be seen as a failure of justice—even though the prosecutor, Jean Peters Baker, not only has a reputation for scrupulous fairness but has held the post of victims' advocate and serves on the board of an anti-sexual assault organization.
Meanwhile, in their focus on misogyny and violence against women, the activists show a troubling disregard for male victims. Last summer, The Denver Post ran a lengthy report on a disturbing incident in Norwood, Colo.: a 13-year-old boy on the high school wrestling team was bound with duct tape and sodomized with a pencil in a brutal hazing ritual. When the boy and his father—the school principal—reported the assault, much of the town turned against them and backed the attackers (two of whom were the wrestling coach's sons). The boy was mercilessly bullied, and there was a clamor for the principal's dismissal. Eventually, the perpetrators pleaded guilty to minor charges and were sentenced to probation, community service, and modest fines; the boy's family, like the Colemans, left town.
While the story got some attention, it did not galvanize outrage or activism. The masked avengers from Anonymous, quick to descend on Maryville and Steubenville alike, went nowhere near Norwood.
Another story of a vicious sexual assault on a male teen—in Homer, Alaska—has been ignored except in the local media. In September 2012, a boy who passed out at a party after drinking heavily was subjected to increasingly abusive "pranks" and finally violated with a beer bottle while dozens of boys and girls watched. The victim ended up at the hospital requiring medical attention; Homer High School football player Joseph Resetarits and his older brother Anthony, captured on camera committing the assault, were arrested. A year later the case languishes in pretrial, with bail restrictions on the defendants relaxed to facilitate their employment. Activist wrath has been notoriously missing.
There is certainly room for advocacy for victims of sex crimes—victims who, to this day, often face lingering prejudices, especially if they are viewed as partly culpable. But such activism will do more harm than good if it remains wedded to an ideology focused on female victimhood and rooted in a blend of radical feminism and paternalistic chivalry. To have a genuinely positive effect, advocacy against sexual assault must advocate for all victims regardless of gender and recognize the legitimate rights of defendants.
This article originally appeared on Real Clear Politics.
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I could be Fist, but I don't want to.
Good article, though I don't like the "well, where were you when..." tack it takes near the end.
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Very thoughtful and insightful piece. I'd just like to add one thing: in speaking to Daisy Coleman's ability to consent to sexual intercourse, it's worth noting that her blood alcohol content was nearly three times the legal drunk driving limit approximately seven hours after she stopped drinking. I think this information should weigh heavily when considering if Matthew Barnett ever believed Daisy was actually consenting to sex as opposed to just laying there and not resisting. My guess is that he would have been quite aware that she was impaired. Under Missouri law, a person under the influence cannot consent to sex.
"Under Missouri law, a person under the influence cannot consent to sex."
I'd hope that under common law, any supposed consent of 'under the influence' would be considered bogus.
Statutory law probably treats it as presumptively bogus if the person providing the consent would be under the influence if caught driving (whatever you might otherwise think of DUI laws, if the law says you can't drive, then it should also sau you can't consent to sex).
First she's was 14. Legal limit is 0. I assume you mean the driving limit for an adult which is .08. So she was .24. Now if she hadn't drank for seven hours then you need to add .104 to her bac to get her at the drop off for a bac of .344. I question whether a 14 year old non drinker can even remember anything at that level. It certainly opens the question of if she consumed more that morning. Also other reporting stated she drank before leaving her mothers house.
Fair enough, Ms. Taylor. And do we know Mr. Barnett's status at the time? I mean, I do hope you recognize the ability of men to get drunk, as well, right? So, if all that happened was drunken sex, should we consider Ms. Coleman the rapist?
Now you're just being silly to try to prove a point. Daisy had to be carried to the car, and was driven home by the boys (I don't know who was actually driving). She was in no condition to initiate the sex or even be aware of what was happening around her.
Consider that .35 is nearly comatose. Sounds fishy to me.
"But such activism will do more harm than good if it remains wedded to an ideology focused on female victimhood and rooted in a blend of radical feminism and paternalistic chivalry."
This article does not come close to justifying this conclusion. It identifies two supposed "harms" of "radical feminism" and "paternalistic chivalry": emotional verdicts and a lack of attention to male victims. There is no reason to think that the former is an exclusive consequence of the ideology cited. Indeed, any moral sentiment capable of driving activism of any kind can quickly shift into unreasonable indignation. And it would be hard to imagine national attention lavished on these individuals' stories without activism. That male victims don't receive attention is problematic, but this condition is hardly a direct consequence of the ideologies cited and, again, hardly measures up to the benefits garnered by the recent activism.
Instead of citing Levy's article, which adds little to Young's argument, the author would have been well served to devote a few words to defining her terminology. I'm not sure anyone ?the author included ? knows what this "ideology focused on female victimhood" looks like.
I think this was a poor article. I am in favor of urging caution against a rush to judgement and encouraging a fair hearing of the facts of the case, but instead of presenting the facts that are known so far and helping us understand all sides we get a generalized caution of the dangers of rushing to judgement, of false allegations of rape plus a purely hypothetical scenario where the alleged victim could have given consent all done under a carefully maintained attitude of disapproval toward rape or victim blaming in general.
As for the Colorado case I think a story just on it is in order rather than just raising it briefly in an effort to discredit feminist outraged about the Missouri case. Anyone who thinks the Colorado case is of lesser importance because the victim was a boy needs to be challenged, but doing in a manner that looks more like a ploy to discredit advocates for the victim in the Missouri case is not a real challenge.
I agree.
If there is factual evidence of sex then it is rape regardless of family, alcohol, etc. This article is a fluff piece.
I don't dismiss the article. It did make me aware of the Colorado case and I appreciate that.
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If Daisy Coleman and her mother were hounded out of town, could they have grounds for a lawsuit?
I think that would be really difficult to prove. You'd need evidence against individuals. Maybe a wrongful termination suit, depending on state law.