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Massachusetts rape decision

Yesterday, the Massachusetts SJC announced a decision allowing a convicted rapist to “go free” after serving only 2 months of a 20 year prison sentence. The man was convicted of rape in 1990, but was released later in the year pending his appeal. But when his 1991 appeal was denied, the man never returned to prison, nor was he registered as a sex offender. For the next 16 years, the man lived free, even raising three sons. Most disturbingly, this same man was arrested two separate times for domestic abuse incidents, but surprisingly, law enforcement officials failed to realize that he should have been behind bars. Not until April of this year, when the man was stopped for a traffic violation, did an officer realize that he had never registered as a sex offender, as required by law. The SJC ruled yesterday that the man has a due process right to serve his sentence “promptly and continuously, rather than in installments” and that he had no duty to voluntarily be taken into custody. The court further stated that to make the man serve his sentence now would “violate the concept of fundamental fairness that is at the core of due process.”

The man is currently spending 6 months in jail for failure to register as a sex offender and is up for parole next month. The court chided the attorney general’s office for what they claim was an “inadvertent error.”

Is this fair to the victim? Should this man have to serve his sentence regardless?


Roe v. Wade for men

On Tuesday, a Federal Court upheld the dismissal of “Roe v. Wade for Men”, a lawsuit that received its nickname based on the premise that men shouldn’t have to pay child support, or should at least have the option to not pay, if the pregnancy was unintended. A men’s rights organization filed the lawsuit on behalf of a man that was ordered to pay $500.00 a month in child support after his girlfriend became pregnant and had the child, even though she swore to him that pregnancy was impossible due to a medical condition. The argument made was that if women have the right to choose between abortion and having the child, than a man should have a choice, too. The court held that society’s interest in ensuring children have the necessary financial support from both parents outweighs any inequality felt by men.

What are your thoughts?


Harry Potter lawsuit

The creator of an online website called “The Harry Potter Lexicon” was recently sued by the books’ author, J.K Rowling, and their publisher. The website was created by a fan, a librarian, and it contains a detailed timeline, a dictionary, and other information from the Harry Potter world. The website was publicly praised by J.K. Rowling, but that fondness didn’t last once she learned that another publisher planned on printing a book version of the website.

Is this clear cut copyright infringement, or is J.K. Rowling just alienating her fans and being greedy?