Rape by fraud? 2 bills look to fix an Indiana loophole that let one Purdue student go free
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. Nearly a year after a former Purdue student escaped a guilty verdict on a rape charge even after admitting that he knew the woman he initiated sex with in a dark university dorm bed thought he was her boyfriend lawmakers filed two bills this week that look to close the loophole Indianas rape statute.
House Bill 1584, filed Thursday by state Rep. Donna Schaibley, a Republican from Carmel, follows a template set out by Sally Siegrist, a former Republican state representative from West Lafayette, who was among those outraged in February 2018 when a Tippecanoe County jurys acquitted Donald Grant Ward.
Wards attorney, Kirk Freeman, successfully argued that what the Purdue freshman did might not have been gentlemanly, but it did not constitute rape according to Indiana law, which defines the crime as an act of force, involving someone mentally disabled or when the victim is unaware of the sexual intercourse or sexual conduct.
In this case, Freeman argued in court, Abigail Finney, also a Purdue freshman at the time, understood she was having sex and wasnt forced into it, even though she thought it was her boyfriend who climbed into the bed and initiated things. The jury bought it: It wasnt technically rape, according to Indiana law.
Read more: https://www.jconline.com/story/news/2019/01/18/rape-fraud-2-bills-look-fix-indiana-loophole-let-one-purdue-student-go-free/2616227002/