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Rape Is Rape- WASHINGTON POST RE DANGEROUS APPELATE COURT DECISION

The  Washington  Post
Editorial
Rape Is Rape
No matter when it begins.

Monday,  November 27, 2006; A18

IS IT RAPE if a woman agrees to have sex, then  changes her mind after the act has begun and tells the man to stop? Not in  Maryland, no  matter how clear it is that the woman has withdrawn her consent. According  to a
ruling last month by the Maryland Court of Special Appeals, the  state's intermediate appellate court, forcing a woman to continue to have  sex against her will is not rape under common law and state court  precedents.
If this is a correct interpretation of the law, the law should  be changed.

Perhaps the facts of the case produced this repugnant  result. An 18-year-old Montgomery College student gave a ride to Maouloud  Baby, then 16, and his friend. The friend -- who later pleaded guilty to  rape in the
incident -- had sex with the young woman in the back seat of  her car. Then Mr. Baby said it was his turn. "He was like, 'I don't want to  rape you,' " the student testified. She said she felt as if she couldn't  refuse and
agreed to have intercourse "as long as he stops when I tell him  to." They began to have sex, she pushed him away and told him to stop, and,  she testified, after "about five or so seconds," he did. Mr. Baby  was convicted of first-degree rape and sentenced to five years in  prison.

This isn't the strongest set of facts for a rape conviction,  and a new trial for Mr. Baby seems warranted. But what's troubling is that,  in granting the new trial, the court found that once consent is given and penetration occurs, no set of facts, however egregious, could produce a rape conviction. The court said it was bound by a 1980 ruling in which  the Court of Appeals found that "ordinarily if [the woman] consents prior  to penetration and withdraws the consent following penetration, there is  no rape" -- though that case involved the opposite situation, where the  woman refused to agree to have sex but gave consent afterward.

Its  conclusion, the court said, was further required by the common law understanding of rape, under which the crime is viewed as an  infringement on the property rights of the woman's husband or father. The  common law,
the court said, "views the initial 'de-flowering' of a woman as the real harm or insult . . . after this initial infringement upon [her  husband or father's] interest in a woman's sexual and reproductive functions, any
further injury was considered to be less consequential. The  damage was done."

The real damage is done by this ruling, which  promotes an offensively archaic view of women and is out of line with other states that have considered the question. Only one state court (North Carolina) has  agreed
with Maryland, seven state courts  have found to the contrary, and Illinois has passed a statute making  clear that consent can be withdrawn. The Court of Appeals or the  legislature should overturn this decision.
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