False rape accusations are a lightning rod for a variety of reasons.
Rape is a repugnant crime—and one for which the evidence often relies on
one person’s word against another’s. Moreover, in the not-so-distant
past, the belief that women routinely make up rape charges often led to
appalling treatment of victims. However, in challenging what author and
law professor Susan Estrich has called “the myth of the lying woman,” feminists have been creating their own counter-myth: that of the woman who never lies.
More than a quarter-century ago, feminist legal theorist Catharine MacKinnon wrote that “feminism is built on believing women’s accounts of sexual use and abuse by men”; today, Jessica Valenti urges us to “believe victims en masse,” because only then will we recognize the true prevalence of sexual assault. But a de facto
presumption of guilt in alleged sexual offenses is as dangerous as a
presumption of guilt in any crime, and for the same reasons: It upends
the foundations on which our system of justice rests and creates a risk
of ruining innocent lives.
How frequent are false accusations? A commonly cited estimate, which may have originated with feminist author Susan Brownmiller
in the 1970s, is that they account for only about 2 percent of rape
reports. After the Oberst fiasco, feminist blogger Rebecca Watson posted
a video
asserting that, statistically, you will be wrong two out of 100 times
if you presume a rape accusation to be true and 98 out of 100 times if
you presume it to be false.
In fact, as Emily Bazelon and Rachael Larimore wrote in Slate
five years ago, official data on what law enforcement terms “unfounded”
rape reports (that is, ones in which the police determine that no crime
occurred) yield conflicting numbers, depending on local policies and
procedures—averaging 8 percent to 10 percent of all reported rapes. Yet
the truth is even knottier than these statistics suggest. The answer to
“How common are false allegations?” depends largely on how false
allegations are defined. Do we count only cases in which a police
report—or a complaint to some other official authority, such as a
college administrator—is shown to be deliberately false? Do we include
informal, word-of-mouth charges like the one against Oberst? What of he
said/she said cases in which the truth is never known?
Not all reports classified as unfounded are necessarily false. In some cases, women who were victims of rape were disbelieved, pressured into recanting, and charged
with false reporting only to be vindicated later on—the kind of awful
story that adds to people’s skittishness about discussing false
accusations. Some police departments have been criticized
for having an anomalously high percentage of supposedly unfounded rape
charges: Baltimore’s “unfounded” rate used to be the highest in the
nation, at about 30 percent, due partly to questionable and sometimes
downright abusive police procedures, such as badgering a woman about why
she waited two hours to report a street assault. By 2013, an effort to
provide better training and encourage full investigation of all
complaints reduced that rate to less than 2 percent.
On the other hand, “unfounded” statistics do not capture all false
allegations—only cases rejected at the earliest stage (correctly or not)
because of what investigators believe to be strong proof that no crime
was committed. This does not include cases in which charges are filed
but rejected for prosecution (between a quarter and nearly half of all cases), or the relatively small number of prosecutions that end in dismissal or acquittal. Of course not all such cases involve innocent defendants—probably not even most; but surely some do.
A similar pattern can be found in a recent study often cited as evidence of the rarity of false accusations: a 2010 paper
by psychologist David Lisak, which examined all 136 sexual assault
reports made on a northeastern university campus over a 10-year period.
For 19 of these cases, the files did not contain enough information to
evaluate the outcome. Of the 117 cases that could be classified,
eight—or 6.8 percent—were determined to be false complaints; that
conclusion was reached when there was substantial evidence refuting the
complainant’s account. But does it mean that 93 percent of the reports
that could be evaluated were shown to be truthful?
More than 40 percent of the reports evaluated in Lisak’s study
(excluding the ones for which there was not enough information to
classify them) did result in disciplinary or criminal charges. However,
52 percent were investigated and closed. Lisak told me that the vast
majority of these complaints did not proceed due to insufficient
evidence, often because the complainant had stopped cooperating with
investigators. His paper also mentions another type of complaint that
did not proceed: cases in which “the incident did not meet the legal
elements of the crime of sexual assault.” Lisak was unable to provide
any specifics on these incidents. But, in other known cases, such
allegations stem from conflicting definitions of what constitutes rape
and consent—particularly in sexual encounters that involve alcohol.
The scandal at Ohio University last fall is an example of this.* A female student who was caught on camera in a drunken public sex act—which bystanders of both sexes had perceived as consensual—then
filed a rape complaint after photos and video that showed her receiving
oral sex from a male student became an Internet hit. The woman, who
claimed she had no memory of the event, received strong support from feminist activists on campus and was vilified as a liar on men’s rights websites. Ultimately, the grand jury cleared the man, concluding that while both parties
were drunk, the woman was not incapacitated—she walked away unassisted
and bought a burrito moments after the encounter—and was a willing
participant. The district attorney also declined to charge either party
with public indecency, commenting that the embarrassment was punishment
enough.
Did the young woman lie to salvage her reputation? Of course we don’t
know; it may be that she thought that any level of intoxication renders
consent invalid, as many campus programs are teaching today. But, as sociologist Kathleen Bogle and law professor Anne Coughlin recently noted in Slate,
this is far from the legal standard for incapacitation required in a
criminal finding of sexual assault. Even assuming the female student
genuinely believed that what happened was rape, it was still, as the
investigation concluded, a wrongful accusation—but one that won’t be
recorded as an “unfounded rape report” by the FBI.
So why is it necessary for us to have a clearer picture of the scope
of false allegations, if most allegations are not intentionally false?
We are not, as some anti-feminist blogs assert,
in the midst of a massive “epidemic” of rape hoaxes. But wrongful
accusations—either deliberately made up or based on gray-area cases that
may hinge on mixed signals, alcohol-addled memories, or
misunderstandings of what constitutes sexual assault—are not the almost
nonexistent anomaly advocates for victims often claim. They can be cries
for attention and sympathy, or attempts to cover up embarrassing sexual
encounters (such as the 2009 Hofstra University case
in which a female student’s claim of gang rape in a men’s room fell
apart after a cellphone video taken by one of the accused men showed
consensual group sex), or vendettas against former partners.
At whatever rate such cases occur, they should not be dismissed as
statistical blips: These lies can have tragic results. Two years ago
former California high school football star Brian Banks, who had spent
five years in prison for raping his classmate Wanetta Gibson, was exonerated after Gibson contacted him to apologize and admitted making up the attack. In 2009, New Yorker William McCaffrey was released after serving four years of a 20-year prison sentence for a rape his friend Biurny Peguero had made up to explain her injuries from a fight with several women. In 2012 a Michigan man, James Grissom, was freed
after nearly 10 years in prison when the woman who accused him, Sara
Ylen, was caught making another false allegation (and faking cancer to
bilk money from insurance companies and sympathetic donors). Even
without a wrongful conviction, the consequences of a false accusation
can be devastating—from a terrifying middle-of-the-night arrest to lengthy pretrial detention.
Cultural unease about the issue of false accusations is
understandable, given how the “crying rape” trope has been historically
linked with misogynist stereotypes of women as devious, crazy, or both.
The old assumptions about women’s propensity to lie about rape led to
sexist laws that required women to be bruised, bloodied, and chaste to
prove that they were attacked. Even now, this topic attracts
woman-haters, such as the “men’s rights activist” who misidentified
an Ohio University student as the accuser in the caught-on-video case
last fall and suggested that even if he had the wrong woman, it was
appropriate payback for calumnies against innocent males.
But “believe the victim” dogma, and the resistance to seeing false
accusations as a real problem, can also create a dangerous environment.
It is a climate in which a law mandating an impossibly vague
“affirmative consent” standard in campus sexual assault cases can be defended
on the grounds that false complaints are a nonissue. It is a climate in
which an exoneration is often presumed to be a miscarriage of justice,
like when, earlier this year, activists at Dartmouth were dismayed at a student’s acquittal even though his story of clumsy drunken sex was backed by substantial evidence.
In this climate a man can be publicly vilified on the basis of an
anonymous accusation on the Internet nearly a decade after the alleged
rape. Even as the allegation against Oberst crumbled, another such
charge gained traction—this one against Max Temkin, co-creator of the
indie game Cards Against Humanity. Temkin’s accuser,
a former fellow student at Goucher College who calls herself “Magz,”
says that she spent years blaming herself for the attack (of which she
has given no specifics), until she was finally emboldened to come
forward by the stories shared in the #YesAllWomen hashtag. Temkin, who
says that “Magz” first began to accuse him after seeing him profiled in a
newspaper, maintains
that the two had a brief consensual relationship that stopped short of
intercourse and that he broke off in a rather insensitive way.
Most of the public responses were scathing toward Temkin. Filmmaker Kelly Kend
speculated that both Temkin and “Magz” were telling the truth but he
had misread her signals, making him an unwitting rapist. Comedian and
culture blogger Arthur Chu called Temkin’s categorical denial of guilt “vague” and “deflecting.” In a much harsher comment, game-maker Ryan Macklin slammed
Temkin’s attempt to defend himself as “vile” and called the mere
mention of a libel suit “a metaphorical threat of rape.” In late August,
Temkin was disinvited
from the XOXO Festival, an event celebrating independently produced art
and technology, after some social media complaints about “promoting a
rapist.”
We don’t know whether Temkin is the victim of a false allegation; we
also don’t know whether “Magz” is a victim of rape. We don’t know—and
will probably never know, barring a confession from him or a recantation
from her. But the rush to condemn Temkin and support “Magz” starkly
illustrates both the power and the peril of unproven accusations.
Our focus on getting justice for women who are sexually assaulted is
necessary and right. We are still far from the day when every woman who
makes a rape accusation gets a proper police investigation and a fair
hearing. But seeking justice for female victims should make us more
sensitive, not less, to justice for unfairly accused men. In practical
terms, that means finding ways to show support for victims of sexual
violence without equating accusation and guilt, and recognizing that the
wrongly accused are real victims too. It means
not assuming that only a conviction is a fair outcome for an alleged
sex crime. It means, finally, rejecting laws and policies rooted in the
assumption that wrongful accusations are so vanishingly rare they
needn’t be a cause for concern. To put it simply, we need to stop
presuming guilt.
*Correction, Sept. 18, 2014: This article misidentified Ohio University as the University of Ohio at Athens. (Return.)
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/09/false_rape_accusations_why_must_be_pretend_they_never_happen.single.html
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/09/false_rape_accusations_why_must_be_pretend_they_never_happen.single.html
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