Hello, Roman Polanski Drugged, Raped and Sodomized a 13 Year Old

For some of you, this is foreign history predating your own birth. For then-teens like me, having been abused by predatory men, it was a travesty of justice. The backing he is getting in arts and diplomatic circles is nauseating.

From Salon.

“But for good or ill, the justice system doesn’t work on behalf of victims; it works on behalf of justice.”

It works on behalf of the people, in fact — the people whose laws in every state make it clear that both child rape and fleeing prosecution are serious crimes. The point is not to keep 76-year-old Polanski off the streets or help his victim feel safe. The point is that drugging and raping a child, then leaving the country before you can be sentenced for it, is behavior our society should not — and at least in theory, does not — tolerate, no matter how famous, wealthy or well-connected you are, no matter how old you were when you finally got caught, no matter what your victim says about it now, no matter how mature she looked at 13, no matter how pushy her mother was, and no matter how many really swell movies you’ve made.

Roman Polanski raped a child. No one, not even him, disputes that. Regardless of whatever legal misconduct might have gone on during his trial, the man admitted to unlawful sex with a minor. But the Polanski apologism we’re seeing now has been heating up since “Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired,” the 2008 documentary about Polanski’s fight to get the conviction dismissed. Writing in Salon, Bill Wyman criticized the documentary’s whitewashing of  Polanksi’s crimes last February, after Superior Court Judge Peter Espinoza ruled that if the director wanted to challenge the conviction, he’d need to turn himself in to U.S. authorities and let the justice system sort it out. “Fugitives don’t get to dictate the terms of their case … Polanski deserves to have any potential legal folderol investigated, of course. But the fact that Espinoza had to state the obvious is testimony to the ways in which the documentary, and much of the media coverage the director has received in recent months, are bizarrely skewed.”

The reporting on Polanski’s arrest has been every bit as “bizarrely skewed,” if not more so. Roman Polanski may be a great director, an old man, a husband, a father, a friend to many powerful people, and even the target of some questionable legal shenanigans. He may very well be no threat to society at this point. He may even be a good person on balance, whatever that means. But none of that changes the basic, undisputed fact: Roman Polanski raped a child.

UPDATE: NikkiK points out that if the perp was FATHER Polanski, you can imagine the uproar

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14 Comments

Filed under abuse, kid's issues

14 Responses to Hello, Roman Polanski Drugged, Raped and Sodomized a 13 Year Old

  1. Lubna

    You are making a big deal out of nothing. I mean he ONLY DRUGGED, RAPED and SODOMIZED a 13 Year Old!!! no big deal…

    I checked on the guy and what I can’t believe is that major film events kept on giving him awards after his conviction!

  2. Kinzi thank you for this! I was so horrified when I was watching an awards show a couple years ago where he was absent and someone made a speech praising him and he was given a standing ovation. I believe it was the Grammy’s but I’m not certain…maybe someone else remembers.

  3. Craig

    I’ve always been shocked by how many American criminals are able to find refuge and even welcome in Europe. Particularly this case, because Roman Polanski was so often in the public spotlight over the years. I don’t understand it at all. I just hope he actually is extradited. It would be even more disgraceful if they let him go, after arresting him.

  4. Bless you, Kinzi. Roman Polanski raped a minor. He then fled overseas. I hope there isn’t any statute of limitations for this, no matter how hard the French whine about it.

  5. Lubna, yea, it wasn’t like ‘rape-rape’, just rape @@ (Whoopi actually said that! I wonder how she counts?). Yes, he seems to be a highly acclaimed film-maker, and that seems to clear him from serving the sentence for what he did. Yeesh.

    Maybe he was afraid of what he did to the girl being done to him in prison, but without the Qualudes.

    Asoom, it may have even been the Oscars, and I think it was last year. I was like horrified. Sorry to have ruined your sweet innocent mind with such junk. XP

  6. Craig, I hadn’t realized that, or not followed the trend. Great allies, I guess. If they let him stay, I would also be very disappointed.

    Marvin, thanks for that blessing! I am hoping that the statute of limitations only applies to unreported crime, not convicted-but-unsentenced criminals who even confessed to the deed.

  7. NikkiK

    My dad was reading an article somewhere that said, what would the reaction be if his name was Father Polanski….

  8. NikkiK, that bit was worth editing the post. Tell you dad I said hello and thx for the tip!

  9. Agree wiith you knizi 100%,
    this would have never happened in Jordan,
    I mean that 13-year old would have a had brother to slaughter her and clean his honor

  10. Hareega, you have this amazing way with words. True indeed.@@

  11. Pingback: Hollywood to host 2014 Pedophilia Olympics to honor Polanski? « VotingFemale Speaks!

  12. TenaciousB

    @craig After a long conversation with one of my German relatives, I might be able to answer your question. There is a widespread perception in Europe, which predated Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib (but they didn’t help) that the US justice system is corrupt and flawed on various levels. Furthermore, Europeans tend to take a much more casual attitude toward sex, and therefore, toward crimes related to sex. As far as Polanski goes, the reasoning in many people’s minds is something like “Well, that was a bad thing to do, but 1) who knows if he actually did it? It’s well known that Americans hate French people and maybe they convicted him just out of spite, and also 2) If we send him back, the punisment will not fit the crime, in the horrible vile American prison system, and 3) it was 30 years ago, and the victim herself has said she wishes he could be forgiven [note: this is true], so what is with these vindictive American rednecks still persecuting the poor man?”

    Which, in my mind, is all bunk. But that’s sort of what they’re thinking, according to my relative.

    There is another aspect here, though. I believe that Roman Polanski should face justice for his crime. I just hope that those of us who believe in Jesus and his grace do not wish for such a thing out of either vengefulness, vindictiveness, or self-righteousness. I look in my own soul and see sins that, while different in execution, are no less vile and damning in the eyes of a Holy God than what Polanski did to that poor girl. Nothing can change the fact that he did drug and rape her, and you’re right… he SHOULDN’T get away with it, not in 3, 30, or 300 years. But the core of my faith is a God who forgives and heals, and that, not that he should suffer for his crime, is mainly the substance of my Polanski prayers.

    • ophgreen

      Sotty to disagree

      Polanski was discussed on Irish radio today (Newstalk 106)
      No support for Polanski

      In France polls in le Monde and le Figero are running
      70 percent against Polanski. Remember these papers
      are read by the elites not the masses

      The issue in France is now
      getting political. Opposition can read these polls and
      are acting on then. The ruling party is already backing
      away from its initial statements

  13. I’d like to ask Whoopi – just what does she mean by rape-rape? Is there also rape-rape-rape? Rape-rape-rape-rape?

    People are defending Polanski out of professional solidarity – but are covering that up with platitudes about “justice” and “but he’s an old, harmless, very accomplished man, leave him alone.” I wish they’d just be honest, with the media and with themselves.

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