Tag Archives: Ma Lik Richmond

Grand jury to be seated in Ohio football rape case

A grand jury about to be seated in eastern Ohio will investigate whether other laws were broken in the case of a 16-year-old girl raped by two high school football players last year.

Nothing is off the table for the Jefferson County panel expected to be selected Monday in Steubenville, said Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine.

“The grand jury is a very good investigative tool as well as a very deliberative body,” DeWine said. It will investigate everything that happened before and after the rape, he said.

Some of the outstanding questions in the case include whether anyone knew about the rape early on but didn’t report it and how dozens of teens attending a party that preceded the attack got ahold of beer and other alcohol.

DeWine has also previously confirmed that the grand jury will look at allegations of another rape the previous April.

A judge last month convicted the two football players of penetrating the West Virginia girl with their fingers after an alcohol-fueled party, once in a moving car and later in the basement of a house.

Ma’Lik Richmond, 16, was sentenced to at least a year in the state juvenile detention system, minus about two months he spent in jail before the trial.

Trent Mays, 17, was sentenced to at least two years in juvenile detention because he was also convicted of photographing the underage girl naked.

One of the reasons DeWine wanted a grand jury is because, even though the teens were arrested within days of the August attack, charges of a cover-up have dogged the case.

Part of that related to inaccurate reports early on that the local prosecutor’s son, who plays on the football team, was involved in the attack. The prosecutor took herself off the case and DeWine’s office stepped in.

The influence of the Big Red football team on community judgment was also questioned, with the coach and district criticized for allowing boys who witnessed the attack to continue playing that fall.

Testimony during the March trial indicated head football coach Reno Saccoccia may have been aware of the rape allegation early on. The coach knew what

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/Wv9eqESDXZ4/

2 teens charged with threatening victim in Ohio rape case

A day after two high school football players were convicted of raping a 16-year-old girl, authorities arrested two Ohio girls suspected of making social media threats against the accuser.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said the girls arrested Monday posted threatening Facebook and Twitter comments on Sunday, the day the players were convicted in Steubenville.

The rape case brought international attention to the small city of 18,000 and led to allegations of a cover-up to protect the Steubenville High School football team.

Steubenville police Capt. Joel Walker said the Jefferson County girls, ages 15 and 16, were being held in juvenile detention.

The older girl was charged with aggravated menacing for a tweet that threatened homicide and said “you ripped my family apart,” according to the attorney general’s office. A Facebook posting from the younger girl threatened the accuser with bodily harm, leading to a menacing charge, the office said.

“These arrests, I hope, will end the harassment of the victim,” DeWine said. “We are simply not going to tolerate this. Enough is enough.”

The guilty verdict was barely an hour old Sunday when DeWine said he was continuing his investigation and would consider charges against anyone who failed to speak up after the attack last August. That group could include other teens, parents, school officials and coaches for the high school’s beloved football team, which has won nine state championships.

A grand jury will meet in mid-April to consider evidence gathered by investigators from dozens of interviews, including with the football program’s 27 coaches, which include junior high, freshman and volunteer coaches.

Text messages introduced at trial suggested the head coach was aware of the rape allegation early on. Reno Saccoccia “took care of it,” defendant Trent Mays said in one text introduced by prosecutors.

DeWine said coaches are among officials required by state law to report suspected child abuse. Saccoccia has not commented.

Steubenville city manager Cathy Davison said residents want to see justice done, and the city will be better off going forward because of the wider investigation.

Steubenville schools Superintendent Mike McVey released a statement Monday reiterating his position that the district was waiting until the trial ended to take action. He declined to address the grand jury investigation.

It’s unclear what could happen to the school’s sports programs if coaches were charged. Sanctions against teams or programs typically involve violations of rules related to playing, such as improper recruiting of student-athletes or playing ineligible athletes, said Tim Stried, spokesman for the Ohio High School Athletic Association.

Mays and Ma’Lik Richmond were charged with penetrating the West Virginia girl with their fingers, first in the back seat of a moving car after a mostly underage drinking party on Aug. 11, and then in the basement of a house.

Mays, 17, and Richmond, 16, were sentenced to at least a year in juvenile prison for the rapes. Mays was ordered to serve an additional year for photographing the underage girl naked.

They can be held until they turn 21.

Special Judge Thomas Lipps recommended the boys be assigned to Lighthouse Youth Center-Paint Creek …read more
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Boys Found Guilty in Steubenville Rape

By Polly Davis Doig A judge has found two boys guilty in the rape of a 16-year-old girl that rocked the small Ohio town of Steubenville, reports the AP . Judge Thomas Lipps ruled that Steubenville High School football players Trent Mays, 17, and Ma’Lik Richmond, 16, are guilty of digitally penetrating the girl after… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

2 Ohio teen football players found guilty of rape

Two Ohio high school football players have been found guilty of raping a drunken 16-year-old girl in a case that roiled a small city and stirred reaction from activists online.

Judge Thomas Lipps ruled Sunday in juvenile court that Steubenville High School students Trent Mays and Ma’Lik Richmond are guilty of attacking the girl after an alcohol-fueled party last August.

The 17-year-old Mays and 16-year-old Richmond were charged with digitally penetrating the West Virginia girl, first in a car and then in a house. They could be held in a juvenile jail until they turn 21.

The case divided the community amid allegations that more students should have been charged and led to questions about the influence of the football team, a local source of a pride.

…read more
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Trial to begin in Ohio H.S. football rape case

Two high school football players are going to trial to face charges they raped a 16-year-old girl after an alcohol-fueled party last summer.

The case in Steubenville in eastern Ohio has attracted attention over allegations that more students should have been charged for failing to stop the attack or knowing about it and not alerting authorities.

Attorneys for 16-year-old Ma’Lik Richmond and 17-year-old Trent Mays have denied the charges and in Mays’ case are seeking to have the case dismissed because of an inability to subpoena certain witnesses.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine’s office is prosecuting the case after the local prosecutor in Steubenville stepped down because her son is also a football player.

The trial, which begins Wednesday in Jefferson County juvenile court, is expected to last all week.

…read more
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Lawyer seeks dismissal in Ohio football player rape case

An attorney for a high school football player facing rape accusations in Ohio says the court or the state should dismiss the case against him because going forward violates his constitutional rights.

Ma’Lik Richmond’s attorney writes in a motion obtained by The Associated Press that among other issues, his client would be denied a fair trial because key witnesses weren’t compelled to testify.

Attorney Walter Madison contends in Monday’s motion that further prosecution of Richmond violates his due process and equal protection rights.

Richmond is one of two high school football players charged with raping a 16-year-old girl. The players go on trial Wednesday in juvenile court in Steubenville in eastern Ohio. Their attorneys have denied the charges.

Attorneys for defendant Trent Mays have also sought dismissal.

…read more
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Lawyer seeks dismissal in Ohio HS player rape case

An attorney for a high school football player facing rape accusations in Ohio says the court or the state should dismiss the case against him because going forward violates his constitutional rights.

Ma’Lik Richmond’s attorney writes in a motion obtained by The Associated Press that among other issues, his client would be denied a fair trial because key witnesses weren’t compelled to testify.

Attorney Walter Madison contends in Monday’s motion that further prosecution of Richmond violates his due process and equal protection rights.

Richmond is one of two high school football players charged with raping a 16-year-old girl. The players go on trial Wednesday in juvenile court in Steubenville in eastern Ohio. Their attorneys have denied the charges.

Attorneys for defendant Trent Mays have also sought dismissal.

…read more
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2 Ohio high school football players face trial in rape case

Two high school football players go on trial this coming week on charges of raping a nearly passed-out-drunk 16-year-old girl during a night of partying in Steubenville. Around the football-powerhouse city, some are demanding to know why at least three other teens aren’t facing charges, too.

After the athletes’ arrest last summer, one of the many rumors that swirled around town proved all too true: Three boys, two of them members of Steubenville High‘s celebrated Big Red team, saw something happening that night and didn’t try to stop it.

Instead, two pulled out their cellphones and took video and a photo.

The allegations shocked and roiled the city of 18,000, but prosecutors brought no charges against the witnesses, fueling months of furious online accusations of a cover-up to protect the team — something law enforcement authorities have vehemently denied.

One blogger wrote a post was headlined: “Steubenville Big Red Rape Accusations: The Other Perpetrators.”

“Anyone that they can show had firsthand knowledge and was partly in some way responsible for the event, the rape, they should be charged,” said Jackie Hillyer, president of the Ohio chapter of the National Organization for Women. She is among those pressing, at a minimum, for charges of failure to report a crime, which is punishable by up to 30 days in jail and a $250 fine.

Longtime Steubenville resident Willa Wade said: “I feel personally that if they were there, they knew it had happened, they did not report it or stop it, then they ought to be brought up on the same charges as anybody else.”

The Ohio attorney general’s office, however, informed the three witnesses in a letter last fall that while they may not have conducted themselves “in a responsible or appropriate manner,” their behavior “did not rise to the level of criminal conduct,” and they would not be charged.

Legal experts said it is clear prosecutors sorely need the witnesses’ testimony to make their rape case because there is little physical evidence against the defendants and the girl may have been too intoxicated to remember much.

“This prosecutor more than anything else wants to get a conviction of the culprits and he does not want to jeopardize that single-minded goal,” said Christo Lassiter, a University of Cincinnati criminal law professor. “That’s the conservative approach. Above all else, get the main culprit. If you can get the other folks along the line, fine.”

Ma’Lik Richmond, 16, and Trent Mays, 17, go on trial Wednesday in juvenile court in Steubenville. They are charged with digitally penetrating the girl, first in the back seat of a moving car after a mostly underage, alcohol-fueled party Aug. 11, and then in the basement of a house. Witnesses said the girl was so drunk she threw up at least twice and had trouble walking and speaking. She was also photographed being carried by the two young men.

If convicted, they could be held in a juvenile jail until they turn 21. They have denied any wrongdoing.

The Associated Press normally does not identify minors charged in juvenile court, …read more
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Ohio football players in rape case will have same trial, lawyer says

The lawyer for one of two high school football players charged with raping a 16-year-old girl wants to delay the trial and also have it moved out of an eastern Ohio city that has received international attention.

Attorney Brian Duncan filed the motion Friday on behalf of Trent Mays, who is scheduled for trial next month in juvenile court in Steubenville. Duncan expects to file another motion this week to move the trial.

An attorney for the other defendant, Ma’Lik Richmond, filed similar motions earlier this month, as well as a request to close the trial to the public.

Richmond’s attorney, Walter Madison, said in an email Tuesday that the visiting judge handling the case has denied a request to give the defendants separate trials.

The Ohio Attorney General’s Office, which is prosecuting the case, wouldn’t comment.

The case has gained global attention through the work of bloggers and hacker-activists who allege other football players should be charged but are being protected by a cover-up. A video and photo posted online also have drawn attention to the case.

In a statement earlier this month, Duncan urged the public not to let the case reflect on the Steubenville area in general. He also acknowledged the role of social media in in the case but again urged people not to draw conclusions.

“We certainly recognize that the video, photograph, alleged facts, and surrounding circumstances set forth on the Internet and portrayed in the media would cause even the most optimistic of man to call into question the defendants’ presumption of innocence,” Duncan said in the Jan. 9 statement.

“We must be careful in this age of social media to ensure that the words set forth do in fact portray the actual story,” he said.

The 12-minute video shows a student who was not involved in the attack but apparently aware of it joking about it while others in the background chime in.

In a photograph, the two defendants are apparently seen carrying the girl by her arms and legs, according to the transcript of an October hearing where a judge heard testimony before deciding whether the teens should be charged.

At that hearing, three other high school students testified to seeing the attack on the girl from nearby Weirton, W.Va. Two of those students also recorded a video and photograph of the attacks on their phones, but deleted the images shortly afterward. Those students were told at the hearing that they would have been charged had investigators found the images.

In letters to attorneys for each of the three students last fall, prosecutors said that while each student “may not have conducted himself in a responsible or appropriate manner, his behavior did not rise to the level of criminal conduct,” according to copies of the letters obtained by The Associated Press through a records request.

Prosecutors added in each case that, “we will not prosecute your client for his actions” on the weekend of the alleged attack in August, the letters said.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Lawyer: Delay, move Ohio football player's trial

The attorney for one of two Ohio high school football players charged with raping a 16-year-old girl says he wants to delay the trial.

Attorney Brian Duncan filed the motion on behalf of defendant Trent Mays, who is scheduled for trial next month in juvenile court in Steubenville (STOO’-behn-vihl) in far eastern Ohio.

Duncan says the motion was filed under seal on Friday. He says he also expects to file another motion this week to move the trial.

An attorney for the second defendant, Ma’Lik Richmond, filed similar motions earlier this month, as well as a request to close the trial to the public.

The case has gained international attention through the work of bloggers and hacker-activists who allege other football players should be charged.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Threats, silent witnesses plague case of rape of 16-year-old Ohio girl

The investigation into an alleged rape of a teenage girl by high school football players that has rocked a small midwestern community continues to stymie officials, who say high school students with information about the case are thwarting investigators even as the FBI looks into threats made against local authorities who are working on the case.

The local sheriff said his family had received a death threat and the police chief in Steubenville, Ohio, said an email he received shut down his computer.

Jefferson County Sheriff Fred Abdalla was told Wednesday by the Ohio Division of Public Safety that people using false names were threatening his family on Facebook, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported.

“They said they were going to murder my family and rape my daughters,” Abdalla told the newspaper.

The reported threats made at local officials are in response to the handling of an alleged rape of a 16-year-old girl last August. The victim, who is said to have been unconscious, was allegedly carried around to a series of parties on Aug. 11 and 12 by members of the Steubenville High football team. The girl was allegedly sexually assaulted, repeatedly — first in the back of a car — as others watched and snapped pictures.

Two star high school football players, Ma’Lik Richmond and Trent Mays, both 16, are facing formal rape accusations. Their attorneys have denied the charges in court.

Some question why other students weren’t charged, and bloggers and hacker-activists have alleged a cover-up meant to protect the popular football program.

Potential witnesses for Richmond and Mays have been threatened and pressured not to testify and some are reluctant to come forward, attorneys for the players said Monday as they consider whether to ask the trial be moved and closed to the public.

At issue is publicity surrounding the case and the concerns some witnesses have that their names and addresses may be published through social media and on the Internet.

The current juvenile court judge overseeing the case scheduled next month in Steubenville has previously declined a request to close the proceedings.

“They are reluctant to sacrifice their college career, their reputation, or their otherwise good standing in whatever community they may be found for fear of being vilified, and certain personal information finding its way on the Internet,” said Walter Madison, an attorney for Richmond.

Social media and the Internet are playing a crucial role in the case. Hackers last week released a video purportedly showing a Steubenville student joking about the alleged attack and an attorney for the girl’s family has said online commentary about the case had made the situation harder.

Another Steubenville student dropped a suit last month over comments on a blog that suggested he might have been involved.

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine, whose office is overseeing the case’s prosecution, said the decision will be up to the judge. He declined to comment on the attorneys’ concerns.

“There is obviously a lot going on in the social media and there’s a lot going on in the mainstream media, but ultimately this case will be decided by a juvenile judge who will listen to the evidence, and the case will be presented no differently than it would in any other case,” DeWine said.

Brian Duncan, an attorney for Mays, also said Monday he’s considering a similar request.

“We just want to make sure our client and the other defendant have their proper day in court,” Duncan said.

The two boys are set for trial next month in juvenile court in Steubenville, a city of about 18,000.

Public interest in the case increased with the online circulation of the video, more than 12 minutes long, that shows one young man joking about the accuser following the alleged attack. The hackers who released the video allege more people were involved and should be held accountable.

On Monday, an attorney said the young man regretted the comments, made when he was intoxicated.

The attorney said in a statement that the man, a 2012 graduate of Steubenville High School and an Ohio State University academic scholarship student this past fall, was ashamed and embarrassed about his comments and the effect his behavior has had, especially on his family.

The man is not a suspect in the investigation and was not present at the alleged attack, said attorney Dennis McNamara, of Columbus. He said the man he referred to as “Michael” left a party around midnight where he was told the alleged victim had been drinking and went to a friend’s house where the video was recorded about 2 a.m. on Aug. 12.

“There is no excuse or justification for the comments and jokes Michael made on the video,” the statement said. “With sober reflection, he is ashamed and embarrassed. He sincerely regrets his behavior and the effect it has had on all parties involved, especially his family. He was not raised to act in this manner.”

The statement said the young man played sports but not football at Steubenville.

McNamara said the video was posted on YouTube in August, taken down, then reposted by a hackers’ group last week.

Over the weekend, city authorities launched a website to combat misperceptions about the case, including the allegation that the football team has an unusual sway over the city.

The site, sponsored by Steubenville city and police officials, explains that only a handful of police officers attended local schools and that the city manager herself is not even from Ohio. Its launch followed the hiring of a consultant who’s helping the city handle a barrage of media attention sparked by the case.

As the investigation continues, it has spurred heated commentary online. Some support the defendants and question the character of the teenage girl, while others allege a cover-up or contend more people should be charged.

The latter group includes hacker-activists who point to comments they say were posted around the time of the alleged attack on social media by people who are not charged.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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