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Most people think it's against the law to make public a rape victim's name. Not so. The U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites) ruled 6-3 in a 1989 case involving a Florida weekly newspaper that the First Amendment permits such disclosure.
But historically, the press voluntarily has "protected" rape victims' identity. Despite that, a number of prominent females have gone public with how they endured rape and coped with it. Among them are Susan Estrich, a professor of law at Southern Cal and author of the book Real Rape, and Karen Jurgensen, editor of USA TODAY.
They and others feel that if rape victims speak up and identify themselves, it might help people better understand its prevalence and brutality and the need to punish perpetrators.
How rape rates in reported cases annually among the three most ghastly crimes based on most recent available statistics (2000):
Murder 15,586
Child sexual abuse 87,480
Rape 92,440 tad more...
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=679&ncid=742&e=14&u=/usatoday/20030808/cm_usatoday/11535113I guess the questions this article poses for discussion is:
1-Is it so? Would publicly identifying alleged rape victims help people better understand its prevalence and brutality and the need to punish perpetrators?
2-Would it more so jeopardize both the alleged victims safety, as well as the STATES case in bring the alleged rapist to justice?
3-would identifying alleged "accuser" than also open the door for character assassination and smearing wherein alleged "accuser" may feel the need to defend her/himself in the media and at trial even in those instances where neither the accused or the accuser is a celebrity or well standing member of the community?
4-what other ramifications can this have on rape conviction rates, positive or negative?