Who is steubenville rape victim




















The girls were arrested Monday and charged on three counts: Intimidation of a victim, Telecommunications Harassment and Aggravated Menacing. Abdalla said one of the teenagers turned herself in to police while the other was arrested, WRTF reported. More from GlobalPost: Two teens convicted in Steubenville rape. The arrests follow emotional courtroom scenes on Sunday when two footbal players, Trent Mays, 17, and Ma'lik Richmond, 16, were found guilty of raping a fellow high school student, AP reported.

The mother gave her name to reporters before delivering the statement Sunday. However, The Times is withholding her identity because it could be used to identify her daughter, who has not been named in this case. The Times does not name victims of sexual assault without their consent. Two witnesses testified that the defendants sexually assaulted the girl during a night of partying on Aug. Emotion then briefly rippled through her voice. I hope you fear the Lord, repent for your actions, and pray hard for his forgiveness.

Richmond broke down sobbing as he tried to speak. North Dakota lawmakers pass restrictive abortion bill. That year-old girl is from Weirton and Bob Fitzsimmons has been representing her and her family members.

She was elected to the homecoming court. On November 25th, the most notorious rape case in recent memory took yet another shocking twist. An elementary school principal and two coaches in the district were indicted as well, facing misdemeanor charges including failure to report child abuse and making false statements.

Shortly after the news hit that morning, Deric Lostutter, a skinny, scruffy year-old programmer in Lexington, Kentucky, whipped out his cell phone and texted me a message.

Anonymous is a purposefully chaotic and leaderless collective. But getting others to give a shit is another story. This is what makes Lostutter stand out. Seemingly overnight, Lostutter fueled a nobler strain of operations called Justice Ops. For a group often perceived as the Jackasses of the Internet, it was a radical rebranding.

Behind him, a few burly southerners in unironic trucker hats play sandbag horseshoes, as a dirty-blonde woman in tight jeans blankly puffs a smoke. To cope with the divorce of his mom and dad — a tower guard at the local prison, famous as a location for the Blues Brothers movie — he escaped into computers, teaching himself to code.

But he had a nascent vigilante inside him. Then one day, he came home to find his mom getting beaten by her boyfriend. Lostutter went ballistic, grabbing a knife and piercing the guy in the stomach. That pretty much changed me from the quiet nerdy kid to what I am now. Lostutter had to drop out of high school and help support his mom and brother by working instead.

After a tough break-up, he spent several months homeless and drunk, then floundering in odd jobs after moving with his mom to Kentucky. When he saw the documentary, We are Legion , about Anonymous, on YouTube last summer, he identified with the portrayal of underdog geeks fighting the Man. There was no initiation to endure nor dues to pay to join the group. Like anyone else, he was in simply because he said so. He needed an Operation. The Clark County, Kentucky, school board was embroiled in controversy over allegedly mishandled funds and a superintendent who allegedly fired a football coach for not playing her grandson.

The superintendent denied those allegations. But despite stories of rats in the cafeteria and untreated black mold at an elementary school, nothing changed in the small town.

And, like a self-ordained superhero with a new mask and a mission, Lostutter thought the power of Anonymous could help win. Anonymous Operations begin with a declaration — usually either by a video manifesto on YouTube or a post on Internet forums.

Lostutter had tapped a vein of outrage that needed a masked avenger, and received damning files — internal emails, expense reports, and other incriminating records about the district — which he then disseminated online. Some thought his methods reckless, and Twitter suspended his account for distributing doxes. When a friend told him that an ex-boyfriend had posted a naked picture of her on a revenge porn site run by a swashbuckling scumbag named Hunter Moore, he had his next target.

When the Op went viral, instantly taking down Moore and his sites, one blogger credited KY with ushering in a new phase of Anonymous. For Lostutter, his fledgling life in Kentucky suddenly had purpose. That night, he went into his living room alone to record a YouTube manifesto for what he called OP Westboro.



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