Viktorthepirate wrote:My own personal experience working on prosecution of these kinds of the cases in the military matches what StA is saying.
My experience is very narrow, but you're fucking retarded if you actually believe it is 1-3%
From an article about the subject that states that actaual proven false rape acuastions, and not acuastions that can't be proven, is like 2-10%
The linked academic study actually concludes that false rape allegations occur at a rate of 2 to 10 percent, but leave aside the typo. Readers could easily interpret the above paragraph to mean that when a woman files a complaint about sexual assault, then an assault did in fact occur over 90 percent of the time. That interpretation is wrong.
A “false” rape allegation is provably false – meaning, for example, that the accused has a bulletproof alibi or the accuser eventually recants. In many of the cases examined by the authors of the study, there was simply not enough evidence to bring charges. A rape might have occurred, but it might not have. Such cases are not classified as false.
Viktorthepirate wrote:My own personal experience working on prosecution of these kinds of the cases in the military matches what StA is saying.
My experience is very narrow, but you're fucking retarded if you actually believe it is 1-3%
From an article about the subject that states that actaual proven false rape acuastions, and not acuastions that can't be proven, is like 2-10%
The linked academic study actually concludes that false rape allegations occur at a rate of 2 to 10 percent, but leave aside the typo. Readers could easily interpret the above paragraph to mean that when a woman files a complaint about sexual assault, then an assault did in fact occur over 90 percent of the time. That interpretation is wrong.
A “false” rape allegation is provably false – meaning, for example, that the accused has a bulletproof alibi or the accuser eventually recants. In many of the cases examined by the authors of the study, there was simply not enough evidence to bring charges. A rape might have occurred, but it might not have. Such cases are not classified as false.
Viktorthepirate wrote:My own personal experience working on prosecution of these kinds of the cases in the military matches what StA is saying.
My experience is very narrow, but you're fucking retarded if you actually believe it is 1-3%
From an article about the subject that states that actaual proven false rape acuastions, and not acuastions that can't be proven, is like 2-10%
The linked academic study actually concludes that false rape allegations occur at a rate of 2 to 10 percent, but leave aside the typo. Readers could easily interpret the above paragraph to mean that when a woman files a complaint about sexual assault, then an assault did in fact occur over 90 percent of the time. That interpretation is wrong.
A “false” rape allegation is provably false – meaning, for example, that the accused has a bulletproof alibi or the accuser eventually recants. In many of the cases examined by the authors of the study, there was simply not enough evidence to bring charges. A rape might have occurred, but it might not have. Such cases are not classified as false.