Climber Charles Barrett Arrested for Yosemite Sexual Assaults
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Charlie is on MP why don't you just talk to him about it? |
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Erik Strand wrote: He was certainly a drug addict but the lack of caring or remorse also indicates a sociopath. I came to the sociopath conclusions after watching him for a long time and understanding the his charming personality was used to enable his actions along with the absolute absence of caring or remorse towards his victims. Addiction and sociopathy are not mutually exclusive. |
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climber pat wrote: This is such a can of worms statement. First off, the American justice system encourages lying to get a better sentence. Secondly, is that you would not be in the same room as him for psychology sessions to watch him gleefully lie to a therapist to get what he wants. That isn't how therapy sessions work. I've gone to them for over ten years. It sounds like you watched him avoid punishment. My dads done it dozens of times. He had the option of like 15 years in prison for making meth, for go to rehab and do 18 months. He took the rehab and dudes already in jail again for drugs lol. From my experience, the only people I see doing unremorseful actions are addicts(another can of worms, since drugs are not the only addiction). The russian school mass shooting was done by people who were doped up in order to lower their levels of caring for the kids they took hostage. |
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The only thing worth reading in this thread. Andrew Rice wrote: |
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Darren Mabe wrote: Dont know if you can log into MP from a jail computer. |
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Andrew Rice wrote: Agreed |
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Adam Burch wrote: That was disturbing on so many levels. Indictment warranted. |
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I’ve only seen the guy’s name as an FAist around here. I certainly hope justice is served, horrible allegations. I can’t imagine the damage caused. Also, the Aguile cowboy solo demands further investigation. |
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This post violated Guideline #1 and has been removed.
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Yury wrote: Awesome. Stats I’ve heard lean overwhelmingly in favor of perps completely getting away with sexual assault than false accusations. I’m not saying he is guilty or not, hopefully the truth of that will come out in criminal proceedings. |
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Bail was denied in this case last Friday. The Federal judge cited flight risk and the accused presenting a threat to others as the reason for denying bail. |
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Please, innocent until proven guilty. Of course, take whatever precautions you need super seriously, but withhold final judgement until the trial. I have been accused of things by a crazy family member and also a crazy coworker and it sucks when people don't look at the evidence and just listen to words. |
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Daniel C wrote: What are you talking about, Daniel? Innocent Until Proven Guilty is the burden of proof for a jury to convict someone in a criminal trial. It regulates the ability of government to punish someone for alleged (until proven) crimes. It's not the burden of proof to have a conversation about someone or to hold an opinion about something they did. Do you get so upset every time there's a conversation about someone being arrested for an (alleged) crime like a murder, a bank robbery, etc.? Or only rape? |
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Andrew Rice wrote: The court of public opinion. |
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Andrew Rice wrote: For me, it depends on the level of evidence, but in general I do think judgement should be withheld until the final verdict, unless there is like overwhelming amounts of evidence. I don't get upset, i'm just trying to reccomend a better path. If you ever get accused of something terrible that you would never do, you will get it. I have zero understanding of what went on in this case, I am just speaking on a general level here as well |
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Daniel C wrote: So two separate “crazy” individuals accused you of something? Was it the same thing? Seems weird. Absolutely, Charlie deserves his day in court but the feds bringing these charges so far after the encounter indicates they got him good. |
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Tradiban wrote: Nope. But the first crazy is in jail after doing the same thing she did to me, to my younger sibling. |
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Tradiban wrote: It merits highlighting--these are federal prosecutors, who have around a 95% conviction rate. Different from state/county/local DAs, the feds generally don't bring cases they haven't already won. *edit. I don't like hyperbole, so I went with a low estimation from what I remember, but decided to look it up after posting. It's much higher than 95%. It is worth noting that the feds really like their plea deals and most cases don't go to trial. Data published by the Pew Research Center in 2019 highlighted how federal prosecutors have a 99.6% conviction rate. To put those numbers in perspective, U.S. Attorneys filed 79,704 cases in 2018. Of those, only 320 resulted in acquittals. |
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Senor Arroz wrote: Do you mean that, in your opinion, being judge by the masses are part of whatever penality one should face for actions XYZ? |
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Senor Arroz wrote: Yeah. I wasn't opposing that. I'm a fan of it. Individual members of the public can form and voice whatever opinions they want. |