JAIL....Savannah
may get jail time while her attackers walk free.
A TEENAGE American girl in
Louisville, Kentucky, who was sexually assaulted by two boys, is standing up to
lawyers, judges and her attackers by breaking the law and taking back her
rights after a court ruling basically slapped the boys on the wrists and made
her an even bigger victim.
Savannah Dietrich, 17, said
the two boys sexually assaulted her after she passed out at a party. They then
shared photos of their vicious attack with their friends. But to add insult to
her injury, the perpetrators somehow managed to squirm their way into a plea
bargain with the prosecutor.
When that happened, an angry
and hurt Dietrich decided to take matters into her own hands—she exposed the
names of the two juveniles in a Twitter message, which violated a court order
to keep their identities confidential as they were considered minors.
"There you go, lock me
up," Dietrich tweeted. "I'm not protecting anyone that made my life a
living hell." Her Twitter account has since been closed.
She now faces the
possibility of a contempt of court charge, which carries a punishment of 180
days in jail and a US$500 (RM1,500) fine if convicted. The boys have yet to be
sentenced for the August 2011 crime.
"They got off very
easy," Dietrich told Louisville's Courier-Journal. "So many of my
rights have been taken away by these boys."
"I'm at the point, that
if I have to go to jail for my rights, I will do it. If they really feel it's
necessary to throw me in jail for talking about what happened to me as opposed
to throwing these boys in jail for what they did to me, then I don't understand
justice," she added.
"For months, I cried
myself to sleep," Dietrich told the local paper. "I couldn't go out
in public places. [Protecting rapists] is more important than getting justice
for the victim in Louisville." (The Lookout)
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