I meant “or.” I think she could have thought she was a teenager but didn’t care.
As I’ve said over and over again, I’m not talking about an impression at a glance. I’m saying it’s implausible that the impression would hold up after any level of meaningful interaction and converstaion. It would become clear very quickly that you were talking to a 5th grader.
Any legislature who provides legal loopholes for fucking 11 year olds.
The only evidence that matters is the age of the victim and the age of the accused. everything else is immaterial. Allowing scads of immaterial evidence would result in kangaroo courts.
Are you trying to make a point? Because you are *at best *arguing against a strawman; nobody is claiming that the sex was accidental. That’s a whole different goalpost than the actual topic of discussion, that a person could deliberately have sex with a person why they unintentionally misidentify the age of.
I can see how you would want to move that goalpost, though, because on the actual topic, it’s your assertion of infallibility that’s the absurd position.
No it isn’t. Just because some X’s can look like Y’s, doesn’t mean that Y’s can look like X’s.
At best, all you’re saying is that an 11 year old might be able to seem like a mentally challenged adult, in which case you still have a huge red flag.
That’s absurd - her parents were right there. Doesn’t the depths of absurdity you find yourself diving to bother you even a little?
In which case this defense would be no defense, obviously.
Seriously - for this defense to ever fly the underage partner would pretty much have to play along - acting the part of an adult before the jury and affirmatively defending his innocence. If she (assuming female) came in a girl scout uniform and ponytails and talked in babytalk on the stand, the dude is fucked - even if he was fooled.
Are you even reading the thread anymore? Anybody with have an iota of awareness of how courts work knows that this is no loophole, except for people who were actually fooled and can convince a dozen others of it. Regarding 11 year olds, this isn’t a loophole, this is a noose.
If you believe that 11 year olds can’t convincingly act 18, then you logically can’t see this defense as a loophole. It’s impossible, unless you literally have no understanding of the jury system, or unless you have abandoned logical thought altogether on the subject.
Then whoever fucked her should have been prosecuted – starting with the stepfather who forced her into the industry and gave her the fake ID in the first place.
No having sex with someone under the age of consent is criminal. That means it’s negligent to have sex with people who you don’t know are of age. And no, an ID card is not enough to provide reasonable cover.
So your argument on this subject may be dismissed as being divorced from reality.
I have an excellent idea - let’s skip this whole ‘trial’ thing altogether and just shoot all criminals! It would save so much time - and really, we already know that everyone accused of any crime is guilty, so there is no reason to ever entertain arguments to the contrary.
You know, I kind of like the idea of being able to accuse people of things, have them not be allowed to defend themselves, and have them harshly punished as a result. What random person should I accuse of murder first?
Define it.
Hitting somebody with your car is criminal, therefore driving is negligent! And no, keeping under the speed limit and driving as carefully as humanly possible is no defense if a person throws themself off the overpass above you and crashes through your windshield.
How many times does a 20 year old man have to go to jail for having sex with a 17 year old girl before it makes sense to do something about it? Should he simply have to rely on jury nullification.
Oh, and from this I take it you support the idea of them being allowed to argue this defense regarding sixteen year olds? (Presuming 18 being the legal limit.)
The damage to the child may be done but what societal purpose does it serve to incarcerate a man who had no knowledge of his crime when he was committing it.
In some states the age of consent is 18 and in other states the age of consent is 15, why does it make sense to imprison someone for 10 years for having consensual sex with a 17 year old in California and not in Alabama? Is the damage to the child less severe in Alabama?
I understand what the law says but lets talk about what the law OUGHT TO SAY.