Rangudu wrote:Rudradev,
Shouldn't the right sample be ALL cases where the victim was gay and committed suicide because he was exposed as such?
Rangudu, I don't think it should, because in fact that's not what happened in Ravi's case at all.
That is indeed one of the primary grievances here; Ravi was tried and convicted in the media for "outing" a closeted gay man and inducing his suicide. However, as the New Yorker article relates, Clementi was already public about his orientation. He had come out to his family, and posted online in gay forums under a recognizable handle. Potential roommates could identify him as gay based on his online identity, before he even came to Rutgers. Also, he did not conceal the fact that he was bringing male lovers to his room, even after the first webcam incident.
The cases to be compared here are cases where a person revealed him/herself to be gay and was THEN harassed or bullied (online or in person) to the extent he or she committed suicide. That is indeed the situation in the cases I listed (Lucas, Brown, Walsh and Chase.) Surely there are others, but these four were also relatively high-profile with attendant media coverage.
In each of those cases there is a long track record of abusive posts on Facebook, threats of violence, actual violence etc. over months. I have not seen any indication that the alleged perpetrators were charged, let alone convicted with hate-crimes in any of those cases.
By contrast, Ravi spied on his roommate exactly once (two viewings of a few seconds each.) Even these two viewings revealed Clementi being amorous with his gay partner but not having sex; in that sense they can't even be ascribed to sexual voyeurism. At the most it was "cheap thrills", and Ravi was being an immature, attention-grabbing jerk by trying to share his cheap thrills with a few friends on the second night. The second night, of course, Clementi switched off the webcam and there was no spying. At the most Ravi should have got expelled from Rutgers, and maybe faced a misdemeanour charge for invasion of privacy.
Also, if you want to prove racial bias, shouldn't you also consider cases where the accused is Indian and ended up with some sort of leniency?
Fair point, but where does one draw the line? It's hardly appropriate to consider traffic violations or even white-collar crimes here. To stay relevant, one would have to limit the search to cases involving the victim's death (murder, manslaughter or suicide.) I'll see what comes up; still, the sample size will likely be very small.
Systemic racial bias against defendants of other non-white races, of course, has been amply supported by available data (including that presented by Lakshmikanth on this thread.)
Shouldn't you at least try to find evidence that the prosecutor or some other government official had said or done things against Indians?
I think that would be a wild goose chase. In this case itself, the victimization of the Indian has occurred under the garb of extreme PC concern for gay rights. DAs and cops are always careful about the statements they make on the record, and especially since the Mark Fuhrman business (OJ Simpson case) they're extra careful.
If all you have is the outcome of one particular case compared against a miniscule sample size across the whole US, isn't the attribution of racial bias to the "system" just as unfounded and wrong as the attribution of anti-gay bias to poor Dharun Ravi?
I don't think so. "Miniscule" compared to what?
The incidence of Indians getting charged with serious crimes is itself low (not because the system is unbiased, but because Indians are generally high-income, law-abiding and offer little opportunity to be accused of crimes.)
Meanwhile the comparators would have to share certain common parameters with Ravi's case: a victim who was (already publicly) gay, was harrassed by means including the internet, and subsequently committed suicide. Additionally, they would need to have occurred within a few years' window of the Ravi case, when the same prevailing climate of gay-lobby politics and media sensationalism was applicable.
Just because we don't have the large sample size afforded by, say, the criminal justice system's treatment of African-Americans doesn't mean that conclusions of bias aren't warranted.
BTW, if the system was racially rigged, then would Ravi have even received the plea deal?
Interesting question. I would like to highlight two things:
1) Ravi's plea deal came with the threat (by default) of deportation. Even if he had accepted the plea, there was no guarantee of being spared deportation. I am not an immigration lawyer, but I'm aware that the state govt. typically has little influence over deportation proceedings, which are in the INS' domain.
One must consider what deportation means in a case like this. Ravi would essentially have been exiled... permanently... from the only country he had ever known. Ravi's family would have had to visit India to see their boy, or else pull up their own roots and move back. It's a very calamitous prospect that no US citizen would have to face in making a similar choice to accept the plea.
So in a sense the prosecution was offering an innocent man the chance to plead guilty to a crime he didn't commit (bias intimidation) and then possibly be exiled from the US for life. Not much of a plea deal.
2) There are many reasons why prosecutors offer plea deals. Sometimes it is to bait the defendant into going to court (the defense lawyer concludes that because the prosecution is offering a deal, they must have a weak case, and opts instead to attempt a full acquittal.)
In fact with Ravi, the prosecution DID have a weak case, but Ravi had an even more inept defense lawyer. Evidence that could have established reasons for Clementi's suicide unrelated to Ravi's spying, was suppressed without challenge. Moreover, the prosecution was blessed with a jury already saturated with media bias about "Ravi posting gay sex videos of Clementi on the internet and exposing his orientation."
Given the inherent bias inculcated by the media circus, and the bountiful career opportunities for those prosecuting a "landmark gay rights case", it is conceivable that the prosecution wanted Ravi to go to trial, and offered him the plea deal as "bait". They bet that he would not take it because of the risk of deportation (plus blemished record, etc.) So they set him up for the axe to fall.
Had Ravi appeared remorseful and made statements up front to show that he is not homophobic, could he have been spared this?
See above. I don't think Ravi believed there was any need to show that he is not homophobic, because he did not count on the media's vilification beforehand. He (and his family) clearly believed that the American judicial system would justly acquit him as innocent.
In the New Yorker article, another (gay) Rutger's student is interviewed. He says that Ravi's IM conversations on finding out Clementi was gay do NOT show any evidence of homophobia, and that Ravi is in fact quite mature about having a gay roommate, even though some of his chat partners are not.