Thread Rating:
02-01-2007, 01:39 AM
Read the link and I think that you will find this to be one of the worst days that anyone could ever have. I also hope that everyone who played a part in this lose their jobs, these may be the most non-thinking individuals that I have ever hears of.
A total disregard for common sense, and a lack of compassion and understanding.
The excuse of the word policy taken to the highest extreme!!
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/state/conte...ictim.html
A total disregard for common sense, and a lack of compassion and understanding.
The excuse of the word policy taken to the highest extreme!!
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/state/conte...ictim.html
02-01-2007, 02:07 AM
Some people are just friggin idiots.
[email=BC75@Bluegrassrivals.com][SIGPIC][/SIGPIC][/email]
BC75@Bluegrassrivals.com
02-01-2007, 02:58 PM
Yeah I agree, people are idiots. Stupid.
02-01-2007, 07:18 PM
Idiot for not taking her to the hospital. Not an idiot for allowing her to go with the officers while looking for the person that raped her. Then again, maybe if she wasn't skipping jail but instead came forward to the warrant, then she wouldn't have been pregnant in the first place.
02-01-2007, 09:01 PM
I can understand them arresting her if that showed up but I'd think they would still continue with the investigation and the part about them not giving her the second dose of the morning after pill is just plain retarded. Those were given to her at the rape crisis center and you/d think the Officers that was with her would've been smart enough to make a note in her file that she was suppose to take them.
02-02-2007, 01:00 PM
She was arrested for a 2003 juvenile arrest. A felony charge in FL is any crime over 250.00.
According to MSNBC
The 21-year-old woman was released Monday only after attorney Vic Moore reported her plight to the local media.
They knew at the jail that she had to have the second pill, the jail worker refused to give it to her due to religious values. She was denied medical treatment.
Yet the Chief of Police say that as soon as they found out that she had been arrested they began the process of trying to get her released.
The police department in 2002 issued a legal opinion under then-Police Chief Bennie Holder that advised against arresting victims of violent crime on outstanding misdemeanor warrants.
"The goal of the policy is to avoid further traumatizing the victim of a serious crime," Assistant City Attorney Kirby Rainsberger wrote at the time. Officers should use discretion to balance "the severity of the injury suffered by the victim compared to the seriousness of the crime specified in the warrant," he wrote.
The policy does not advise whether police should arrest crime victims wanted on felony charges.
"It's rare in police work that someone isn't arrested on a felony warrant, but you always want to have compassion for a victim," police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said Monday. "This may be a case where we need to revise our policy."
Police supervisors did not learn the woman's circumstances until early Monday, after inquiries from the media and the woman's attorney, Virlyn "Vic" Moore III of Venice. At that point, police worked with Circuit Judge Walter Heinrich to grant her bail: $4,585 that a Sarasota County court said was unpaid in a 2003 auto theft and burglary case, McElroy said.
Moore disputed that the money was unpaid, calling it a "technical violation." The woman thought the matter had been resolved, he said.
Florida
REFUSAL FOR RELIGIOUS OR MEDICAL REASONS.âThe provisions of this section shall not be interpreted so as to prevent a physician or other person from refusing to furnish any contraceptive or family planning service, supplies, or information for medical or religious reasons; and the physician or other person shall not be held liable for such refusal.
But it also says this:
ACCESS TO SERVICES; PROHIBITIONS.âExcept as otherwise provided in this section, no medical agency or institution of this state or unit of local government shall interfere with the right of any patient or physician to use medically acceptable contraceptive procedures, supplies, or information or to restrict the physician-patient relationship.
âObviously, any policy that allows a sexual battery victim to spend a night in jail is a flawed policy,â police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said. âSo our city attorney is writing a new policy right now.
DAMAGE CONTROL
So she was raped, arrested and denied her prescribed medicine, held in jail for 36 hours.
Also it was reported the the officer didn't want to arrest her, but was ordered to.
The arrest was bad enough, but to prevent her from receiving the medicine is barbaric, and unexcusable.
I believe that we all have a right to our beliefs, but no one has a right to force them on someone else.
According to MSNBC
The 21-year-old woman was released Monday only after attorney Vic Moore reported her plight to the local media.
They knew at the jail that she had to have the second pill, the jail worker refused to give it to her due to religious values. She was denied medical treatment.
Yet the Chief of Police say that as soon as they found out that she had been arrested they began the process of trying to get her released.
The police department in 2002 issued a legal opinion under then-Police Chief Bennie Holder that advised against arresting victims of violent crime on outstanding misdemeanor warrants.
"The goal of the policy is to avoid further traumatizing the victim of a serious crime," Assistant City Attorney Kirby Rainsberger wrote at the time. Officers should use discretion to balance "the severity of the injury suffered by the victim compared to the seriousness of the crime specified in the warrant," he wrote.
The policy does not advise whether police should arrest crime victims wanted on felony charges.
"It's rare in police work that someone isn't arrested on a felony warrant, but you always want to have compassion for a victim," police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said Monday. "This may be a case where we need to revise our policy."
Police supervisors did not learn the woman's circumstances until early Monday, after inquiries from the media and the woman's attorney, Virlyn "Vic" Moore III of Venice. At that point, police worked with Circuit Judge Walter Heinrich to grant her bail: $4,585 that a Sarasota County court said was unpaid in a 2003 auto theft and burglary case, McElroy said.
Moore disputed that the money was unpaid, calling it a "technical violation." The woman thought the matter had been resolved, he said.
Florida
REFUSAL FOR RELIGIOUS OR MEDICAL REASONS.âThe provisions of this section shall not be interpreted so as to prevent a physician or other person from refusing to furnish any contraceptive or family planning service, supplies, or information for medical or religious reasons; and the physician or other person shall not be held liable for such refusal.
But it also says this:
ACCESS TO SERVICES; PROHIBITIONS.âExcept as otherwise provided in this section, no medical agency or institution of this state or unit of local government shall interfere with the right of any patient or physician to use medically acceptable contraceptive procedures, supplies, or information or to restrict the physician-patient relationship.
âObviously, any policy that allows a sexual battery victim to spend a night in jail is a flawed policy,â police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said. âSo our city attorney is writing a new policy right now.
DAMAGE CONTROL
So she was raped, arrested and denied her prescribed medicine, held in jail for 36 hours.
Also it was reported the the officer didn't want to arrest her, but was ordered to.
The arrest was bad enough, but to prevent her from receiving the medicine is barbaric, and unexcusable.
I believe that we all have a right to our beliefs, but no one has a right to force them on someone else.
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