Saletan doubles down on his Polanski error
by
Tom_Tildrum
10/15/2009, 3:18 PM #
Now Saletan lectures us about the importance of "knowing and thinking more" about the Polanski case. Given that he just got flayed by his readers for omitting significant evidence from his analysis, namely the victim's own testimony, this is a pretty breathtaking example of chutzpah.
It's especially annoying in light of the fact that Saletan clearly has not read the actual probation report and is relying simply on the NYT article. It's available here:
<link>
It's a monstrosity. The report bends over backward to cite any fact and draw any inference in Polanski's favor. It discusses those portions of the victim's g.j. testimony that describe her drinking champagne, but it completely neglects to mention her testimony that she said no to Polanski multiple times. It quotes multiple people saying that the victim looked older than she was, and it discusses her prior sexual experience and drug use. It goes into a lot of detail meant to establish that the victim was not screaming and bleeding after the rape.
So, it's offensively nonsensical for Saletan to say that it's "legitimate and relevant to cite evidence 'that the victim was not only physically mature, but willing.'" A look at the actual report shows that there is no such evidence. The probation report's conclusion that she was "willing" was not based upon any objective facts but rather upon the probation officer's inferences from preconceived prejudices about how a good girl behaves as opposed to a little slut. That's the equivalency that Saletan is drawing, perhaps unwittingly -- that the sexist assumptions of the past deserve as much weight in evaluating Polanski as do the actual facts of the case.
We've learned a lot in the last thirty years about sexual assault, victim psychology, coercion, and consent. Saletan would have us throw all of those advances away.