Coito ergo sum wrote:No, that's why it IS like other cases.MrJonno wrote:It's not like other crimes, if someone is found innocent of murder in most cases no one is going to say a murder didnt take place (a successful self defence please is incredibly rare here) just that the person on trial didnt do it.Not exactly. She could be mistaken. Her recollection could be faulty. She could be honestly pointing the finger at one guy when it really was another - i.e. she could have been raped, but by someone else. Under many many circumstances, she could be trying to be honest, but wrong. And, of course, sometimes people lie.
In the case of rape its going to be rare for someone to say sex didnt happen and rare for the victim to not be able to identify the attacker, its almost always comes down to consent, if the accused is found innocent the victim consented is the only reasonable thing to draw from it and hence no crime took place at all.
It's one of the reasons women often don't want to go to court, the only real evidence is going to be their statement and that of the accused, one will be believed and the other won't
What kind of system would you want? A system where an accuser can point the finger with no evidence but his own testimony, and that is sufficient to convict?
A murder is not a consent crime-- murder is essentially 'the unjustified, unexcused killing of another human being with malice aforethought (intent or recklessness)" - a rape is sexual intercourse without consent. So, saying "sexual intercourse never happened" is one defense, but so is -- "yes we did have sex, but she expressed what I reasonably interpreted to be consent."
On the issue of consent, you say that if the jury acquits then they are saying that she consented. No, they're not. Like any other crime, they're saying that the particular element of the crime could not be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. They're saying they have reasonable doubts. Having reasonable doubts is not the same thing as saying "she consented."
Another way to look at it is that the jury can even be of the mind that she "probably" did not consent, but they would still have to acquit if they could not erase all "reasonable" doubts. i.e. -- something might have "probably" happened, but one may still find that it may not have happened and that the doubt about whether it did happen is "reasonable." Reasonable does not mean that they have to find the defendant's story is more probable than the accuser's story. Reasonable just means that there is a significant possibility.
Oddly, there was a murder case in Germany that did involve consent. The two weirdos* had concocted a cannibalistic suicide plot. They conspired to cut bits off one of them, and cooked and ate them together.
They had "met" on the web. Surely a variant on that porn rule!
But the issue then arose as to whether murder was the appropriate charge, given that the deceased/ingested had fully consented at every step.
But, as with some euthanasia cases, consent did not reduce the charges from murder.
*Is my privilege showing?