videogamer
Banned
Besides the whole thing, that statement makes my blood boil. The lawyer is apparently trying to blame the videotape. And even if the videotape's presence was causing her emotional troubles, it's the actions depicted in the videotape that mattered. AND anyone with a smidgen of competnce who works with body parts (dead or alive) knows that there is a shitload of regulations regarding what is done to them. Of course, this lawyer apparently forgets to mention what happened to Jane Doe:The defendants also were each sentenced to three years' parole after their prison terms. Because of time already spent in jail, and with credit for good behavior, Haidl could be freed in 21 months and the others a few months later.
...
The crime occurred in the early morning of July 6, 2002, in the Corona del Mar home of Haidl's father, Don Haidl, then an assistant sheriff. There, Haidl, Nachreiner and Spann all 17 at the time gathered for an alcohol-fueled party with the victim. All four were high school students in Rancho Cucamonga.
Haidl used a Sony video camera to record himself and his friends performing sex acts on the girl, and later left the tape among acquaintances at a Newport Beach summer rental house. A renter's girlfriend, who thought the girl depicted in the footage looked dead, passed the tape to a policeman.
Prosecutors argued that the evidence on the tape was clear: The girl was passed out when the boys took turns violating her body with a variety of objects, including a lighted cigarette, a pool cue and a Snapple bottle.
Defense attorneys argued that the tape, which has not been shown publicly, told a different story. They characterized the girl as an aspiring porn actress who was feigning unconsciousness. They stressed her promiscuity and found former friends to testify that she was a chronic liar.
The defense raised enough doubt that a jury deadlocked in summer 2004, leaning toward acquittal on nearly all counts. At a second trial last March, the jury convicted Haidl of six counts of sexual penetration, Spann of five, and Nachreiner of four. The jury deadlocked or voted to acquit on charges of sexual assault with a deadly weapon, oral copulation and rape.
At sentencing Friday, Judge Briseño had the option of giving the defendants probation or long prison terms as many as 18 years for Haidl, 16 for Spann, 14 for Nachreiner.
The day began gray and drizzly, a climate the judge said matched the grim mood of the proceedings inside his 11th-floor courtroom, which was so packed that many of the defendants' supporters had to crowd outside the door.
The hearing began with expressions of remorse and pleas for lenience from the defendants and their families. Haidl's father called his son "a good kid who ended up in a very bad situation." [:rolleyes]
"There are times I look back and wish I would have been there more for him. I wish I hadn't worked 70 hours. I wish I hadn't volunteered for so many things." He added: "I've had to watch my son grow up through a glass divider." He said his son "never had a mean bone in his body."
After the defendants spoke, the victim stood to face the judge. She read from sheets of lined white notebook paper. Her voice bristled with controlled anger. She said she wanted to see her attackers in prison. "A part of my soul will be lost forever," she said.
She said she learned what had happened to her when her father woke her up one day, took her in his arms and wept as he repeated what police had just told him: that she'd been gang-raped.
She spoke of the "cruel and inhumane" treatment she endured as the defense mounted an aggressive campaign to discredit her. She said private investigators hounded her, and fliers in her neighborhood identified her by name. When she switched schools, she said, defense investigators showed up on campus and broadcast her name to her new classmates.
"Why were they still torturing me?" she said. "Wasn't that one night enough for them?"
Beset by nightmares, she said she had difficultly sleeping, and sat in bed staring at pictures that depicted her life before the assault. She used to be an A student on the volleyball and track teams, with dreams of attending New York University. Afterward, she became addicted to methamphetamine.
"Why was I being treated like the perpetrator of the crime?" Jane Doe said. "Didn't people realize I was the victim?"
She said suicide crossed her mind, but "I wasn't going to let them take my very last breath."
Defense attorneys urged the judge to show their clients leniency. "They are looking into the depths of hell," said John Barnett, who represents Nachreiner, "and they're frightened."
Al Stokke, Haidl's attorney, said it was unclear whether Jane Doe's troubles stemmed from the videotaped incident or from preexisting emotional problems. Stokke switched gears from the defense claim that she was feigning unconsciousness. He compared the crime committed on the passed-out Jane Doe to someone plunging a knife into a corpse.
"She couldn't have felt it happen," he said. "She only knows it happened because of the videotape."
Lost in the buildup to the sentencing hearing is Jane Doe, the name prosecutors gave the victim, who was 16 years old at the time of the crime. She was thrust suddenly into the bright lights of the national media, as well as the intrigue of bitter defendants and some cops who openly sympathized with the Haidls. For example, Sheriff Mike Carona used his second in command in a bold-faced but ultimately vain attempt to influence the Newport Beach police investigation. Seeking dirt on the victim, Gregs mother, Gail, hired people to post fliers in Does neighborhood. Later, the defense hired a professional publicist and several teams of private detectives to attack her and her family. She was tracked like a dog and subject to countless smears. She found temporary relief in methamphetamines, a drug she says shes been working hard to overcome in recent months.
Its hardly surprising her life spiraled out of control. One Haidl dickJohn Warren, a former ranking FBI agent in Santa Anadisclosed Does identity to students at the high school she had transferred to. Most of her friends abandoned her, shamelessly siding with Haidl, the son of a man reportedly worth more than $40 million. The defense illegally leaked her private medical records to the media, a move that Los Angeles Times columnist Dana Parsons rewarded by downplaying the crime and belittling District Attorney Tony Rackauckas for filing felony charges. On the witness stand, Doe was called a slut and a liar by lead defense lawyer Joe Cavallo. She was forced to stare at enlarged pictures of her own vagina during torturous cross examinations. The defendants floated the idea that she had raped them. In front of the jury, defense lawyer Peter Morreale asked her if she liked to swallow after oral sex. At another point, defense lawyers argued that she faked unconsciousness to shoot a necrophilia-based sex video. They claimed she wanted to launch a porn career and the defendants were merely obliging her wishes.
Faking? asked jury foreman Ruiz. No way. You can see on the video that she was only conscious for the first couple of minutes. After that, they were propping her up. Whatever they gave her knocked her out in my opinion. Even before they let go of her and her head hit the couch, it was obvious the line had been crossed. She did not put herself in those positions on the pool table.
These sex offenders could be paroled in about 2 years.
http://www.ocweekly.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=24642&Itemid=2
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-me-haidl11mar11,1,179575.story