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desflood
04-12-2005, 09:06 PM
Witnesses: Disabled Girl Punched In Face, Forced To Perform Sex Acts

POSTED: 2:25 pm EDT April 12, 2005
UPDATED: 2:39 pm EDT April 12, 2005

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A 16-year-old disabled girl was punched and forced to engage in videotaped sexual acts with several boys in a high school auditorium as dozens of students watched, according to witnesses.

Authorities are investigating and no charges have been filed in the alleged attack last month at Mifflin High School. Four boys suspected of involvement were sent home and have not returned to class.

Also, the principal, Regina Crenshaw, was suspended and will be fired for not calling police, school officials said. And three assistant principals were suspended and will be reassigned to other schools.
Crenshaw had no comment Tuesday.

The girl was forced to perform oral sex on at least two boys, according to statements from school officials, obtained by The Columbus Dispatch.

Part of the alleged assault was videotaped by a student who had a camera for a school project.

School officials found the girl bleeding from the mouth. An assistant principal cautioned the girl's father against calling 911 to avoid media attention, the statements said. The girl's father called police.

Her father said the girl is developmentally disabled. A special education teacher said the teen has a severe speech impediment.

E20
04-12-2005, 09:14 PM
WTF!?
How the fuck does someone do that...................

Hook Dem
04-12-2005, 09:29 PM
Thats just about as low as you can get!

Guru of Nothing
04-12-2005, 09:35 PM
Phil Hendrie?

nickbroken
04-12-2005, 09:44 PM
That's really fucking weak they should give the death penality for rape.Can't believe the principal didn't call the police, what scum we have in society today eh?

King
04-12-2005, 09:57 PM
Every single person that was there should be prosecuted.

mookie2001
04-12-2005, 10:02 PM
desflood
frederick douglass has two s's

desflood
04-12-2005, 10:24 PM
Right you are... sorry about the spelling lapse.

SpursWoman
04-12-2005, 10:47 PM
:(

Clandestino
04-12-2005, 11:44 PM
we live in a country that has lost its sense of morality. there is no incentive to do the right thing.

we have become the new roman empire.......the only question now is when does the USA implode on itself......the clock is definitely ticking.

one day a highly, ultra conservative, moral authority will swing the pendulum the other way...........can anyone say "the holy roman empire"?

I think islam maybe that authority......it will happen in europe first, then the US.

dan? is that you?

islam will never be the authority for shit... no country that has their wives walking behind them hidden under sheets in 200 degree weather will ever rule the rule again. the islamic nation doesn't believe in progress...w/o progress, you can't survive...

Clandestino
04-12-2005, 11:45 PM
do you hear that.......I think its china adding another soldier to their army of 100,000,000. oh, and one more nuclear warhead.

If the chinese government can keep my family safe, and keep the probablity of a home invasion from occuring(it happens everyday), or a sexual predator from moving next door. then sign me up.

you moving to china? i doubt they will let you post at spurstalk... so long buddy...

xcoriate
04-12-2005, 11:58 PM
whoah that totally and utterly wrong. i cant believe people just watched. fucking weak.

whottt
04-13-2005, 12:34 AM
I think some people should go rape and beat the principals of that school...then tell them not to call the cops because we wouldn't want the media to get involved.

I seriously hope the principals get thrown in jail along with the rapists. They were acessories to the rape.

Cant_Be_Faded
04-13-2005, 01:08 AM
umm where did you get this story cuz ive looked on cnn and other news sites and its nowhere to be found

Kori Ellis
04-13-2005, 01:40 AM
It's an AP news story. It's on just about every major newspaper website that's out there.

Drachen
04-13-2005, 02:57 AM
you moving to china? i doubt they will let you post at spurstalk... so long buddy...


BTW we have posters from china posting on here.

3rdCoast
04-13-2005, 04:14 AM
BTW we have posters from china posting on here.
Really?

SpursWoman
04-13-2005, 06:36 AM
yes

JoeChalupa
04-13-2005, 06:58 AM
I can't believe there wasn't one male who had the balls to stand up for this girl. Apparently there isn't a real young man in the school.

Useruser666
04-13-2005, 07:59 AM
I think it would have been worth going to jail for a night to punch that principal in the face when she said that.

Shelly
04-13-2005, 08:00 AM
Good God.

1369
04-13-2005, 08:33 AM
If that had been my daughter, there would be at least four families that would be making funeral arrangements...

bigzak25
04-13-2005, 08:35 AM
sick and sad. the offenders better get more punishement than "being sent home".

if there's a tape and witnesses, it should only be a matter of time before charges are filed....

Clandestino
04-13-2005, 09:14 AM
BTW we have posters from china posting on here.

mainland china? does the chinese gov know what goes on in here?

Drachen
04-13-2005, 11:38 PM
yes, in fact as we speak, my friend is at his house on his computer talking to a girl he met in china through skype and guess what (gasp) she is coming here for christmas.

timvp
04-14-2005, 02:05 AM
Actually, if flash wants to move to China, they have their own Spurs forum. A member of SpursTalk who lives in China got permission to translate our articles and put them on that forum.

China's in the house. (http://www.chinaspurs.com/)

Clandestino
04-14-2005, 11:45 AM
oh yes, china, the land of the free...


World - AP Asia


China Soups Up Internet Censoring Filters

2 hours, 38 minutes ago World - AP Asia


By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer

NEW YORK - The Chinese government has become increasingly sophisticated at controlling the Internet, taking a multilayered approach that contributes to precision in blocking political dissent, a report released Thursday finds.

The precision means that China's filters can block just specific references to Tibetan independence without blocking all references to Tibet. Likewise, the government is effective at limiting discussions about Falun Gong, the Dalai Lama, Tiananmen Square and other topics deemed sensitive, the study from the OpenNet Initiative finds.


Numerous government agencies and thousands of public and private employees are involved at all levels, from the main pipelines, or backbones, hauling data over long distances to the cybercafes where many citizens access the Internet.


That breadth, the study finds, allows the filtering tools to adapt to emerging forms of communications, such as Web journals, or blogs.


"China has been more successful than any other country in the world to manage to filter the Internet despite the fast changes in technology," said John Palfrey, one of the study's principal investigators and executive director of Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet and Society.


Saudi Arabia, for example, largely controls the Internet by having all traffic flow through a central agency, where it can be monitored. Visitors trying to access a banned site get a message saying it has been blocked, Palfrey said.


"China is much more subtle than that," Palfrey said. "You don't know what you don't know. It's more effective than if you see it but know you can't access it."


With filters at multiple points, including some search engines, content is simply removed rather than replaced with a notice, he said.


Google Inc. has acknowledged its Chinese-language news service — introduced on a test basis last fall — leaves out results from government-banned sites, though the company says that is done so users won't end up clicking on links that lead nowhere because of the Chinese filters.


Palfrey added that Chinese filtering methods are effective because they constantly change, keeping its users off-balance.


China, which has the world's second-largest population of Internet users behind the United States, promotes Internet use for business and education, while trying to curb access to political dissent, pornography and other topics the communist government deems sensitive. Many users do find ways around the controls — for instance, using "proxy" servers that mask a site's true origin.


It is through similar proxy servers and long-distance calls that researchers outside China managed to test what users inside China see. The researchers also employed volunteers inside the country to conduct more extensive testing.


The researchers deployed software and physical equipment called packet sniffers to monitor the flow of traffic and try to gauge where content gets dropped. Palfrey would not elaborate on techniques, other than to say many Internet systems have security flaws through which outsiders can sneak in software.


Funded by George Soros' Open Society Institute, the OpenNet Initiative is a collaboration of researchers at Harvard, the University of Cambridge and the University of Toronto working on issues of Internet censorship and surveillance.


Their testing determined that:


_Though some dissidents complain that e-mail newsletters sent in bulk are sometimes blocked, individual messages tend not to get filtered.


_Much of the filtering occurs at the backbone, but individual Internet service providers sometimes deploy additional blocking. Cybercafes and operators of discussion boards also control content proactively under threat of penalties.





_Filtering tends to be triggered by the appearance of certain keywords, rather than a visit to a specific domain name or numeric Internet address. The keyword-based filters also allow blogs to keep people from completing posts containing banned topics.

"You can filter much more precisely at a keyword level," Palfrey said. "China wants to be able to enable its citizens to use the Internet and grow its economy. Shutting down all blog servers doesn't seem like a great idea, but it doesn't want to let through all forms of political dissent."

___