Rape trial isn’t about lying
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STEVE SMITH
I know that the rape trial of Greg Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith
Spann is no laughing matter, but I have to chuckle when I think of
the silly strategy attempted by the defense team on Wednesday.
To recap, the three boys are accused of the rape of an unconscious
girl, being called Jane Doe, then 16, at the home of Greg Haidl, now
18. Haidl, whose parents, including his father, Orange County
Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl, apparently believe that a lack of
supervision builds character, has been detained by law enforcement
authorities three times since his arrest on suspicion of trespassing
and vandalism, and was found with a small amount of pot in his
possession.
At Wednesday’s court session, the defense called on some of Doe’s
so-called friends to undermine her credibility by pointing out
discrepancies in Doe’s story. The strategy here is that if you can
convince the jury that Doe lied about the little stuff, surely she
has lied about the big stuff, specifically, the events surrounding
the rape. Some friends, eh?
Unfortunately for the defense, however, the lying works both ways.
One of these “friends,” (my first laugh), Jenna Stroh,
contradicted several small aspects of the events leading up to the
alleged rape, events that, as far I can determine, have no bearing on
whether Doe was conscious during her ordeal and able to authorize the
insertion of several objects into her vagina while she lay on a pool
table.
Stroh told the court that four girls, Doe, Stroh, Melissa
Matsumoto and Crystal Davis, had planned to stay overnight at Haidl’s
home on July 4, shortly before the alleged rape.
In the Daily Pilot report, Stroh is quoted as saying, “We had all
lied to our parents about where we were going.”
OK, so help me out here. If we’re not to believe what Doe says
because Stroh said Doe has lied about certain inconsequential
circumstances, why should we believe Stroh who has admitted on the
witness stand that she herself is a liar?
As of right now, Stroh is an admitted liar while Doe is only an
accused liar. So far, Doe wins, no? There’s my second laughing point.
Here’s my third: The trial recap states, “Both girls, [Stroh and
Matsumoto] said they gradually lost touch with their friend, but that
they still love her and would want to be friends with her again.”
Yes, sir, I’m sure I’d go running back to those two after the
friendly testimony they’ve given.
My fourth laugh is that a defense attorney could even remotely
believe that a 16-year-old girl who lied to her parents, in this
case, Doe, is some sort of criminal. Your child excepting, of course,
it is common knowledge that kids lie to their parents. They lie about
their schoolwork, about how much candy they’ve eaten, how much
television they’ve watched and whether they’ve cleaned their room.
They lie about whether they’ve broken the nice white ceramic and
chrome vitamin jar in the bathroom (actually, I cannot tell a lie,
Cay, I did that last Thursday), and they lie about their friends and
where they’re going. Kids lie all the time (again, your kid is the
exception) and they often make Pinocchio look like Mother Teresa.
But to the defense team, childhood lying is being portrayed as
some sort of rare and serious offense.
My version of this is that I don’t care who lied and who didn’t.
What I know about that night, and what no one seems to dispute, is
that those three boys did these sick and disgusting things to Doe.
Whether she consented or whether she was conscious is stuff for
high-priced defense attorneys to prove. That Doe may have approved,
if in fact she did, does not make it OK to do. It takes two, folks,
and the boys could have declined at any time.
But they did not. They made conscious decisions to be pigs. And
what really burns me about this whole sordid affair is that they may
be found not guilty of a crime and that is likely to send approval of
their behavior that night.
Here, I have to judge what I can’t see based on what I can see. If
Greg Haidl is found not guilty, his life will resume as it was before
the trial.
He’ll be able to run around unsupervised as though none of this
ever happened. I know this based on the parenting -- or lack thereof
-- he has received so far during this trial. To guess otherwise is to
go against established precedent.
My own two kids have received more discipline for sneaking sweets
than Greg Haidl is likely receive from his parents for his
unspeakable behavior that night.
Finally, here’s a special note to Wendy Leece, who has questioned
what she believes is the excessive coverage of the trial. Over the
years, Leece and I have seen eye-to-eye on most issues, but not on
this one. We need the coverage of this trial to highlight the sorry
state of parenting in this country and to show that having lots of
money can never make up for having lots of interest in our children’s
lives.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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