Fat Man wrote:
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Percentage_of ... ommit_rape
Q: Percentage of men who commit rape?
A: Answer
sports team members were found to comprise 20.2% of the men involved in sexual assault or attempted sexual assault even though they made up less than 2% of the campus population.
I would say that a jock is about 10 times more likely to stick it to some one than most male rapists.
Wow. Thanks for posting that statistic Fat Man.
Sports team members are 10 times more likely to rape.
That's very interesting. And quite disturbing.
That statistic should be publicised more, so that the general public can wake up to what their sporting heroes are really made of - they are 10 times more likely to be rapists.
No doubt the corporations and commercial media that run "big sport" would want to keep that sort of information quiet.
But fortunately, there is a publicly owned, publicly funded TV network here, (therefore not dictated to by any advertisers), and they have a very high standard of journalism and they are not afraid to run controversial hard hitting stories, and they recently produced an excellent documentary exposing some of the depraved behavior of one of the football codes here.
And when that documentary aired on TV here earlier this year, it caused a media feeding frenzy. What it exposed caused a national incident here, and it looks like it was that very documentary that caused that woman to make the comment that was quoted in the very first post of this thread. That's what sparked her to make that comment in the first place - just 4 days after it aired on TV here. She was referring to actual documented incidences.
That documentary is definitely worth having a look at, even if you had to pay a couple of dollars to see it. Definitely one for the archives.
It was called "Code Of Silence", on a show called "Four Corners", on ABC-TV, on 11th May 2009.
See all the details of it here at -
http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/content/ ... 565007.htm
Here is an excerpt from the transcript of it - Sarah Ferguson is the reporter -
These footballers are low-life scum -
SARAH FERGUSON: In February 2002 the Cronulla sharks took a large group of players on a pre-season tour to New Zealand.
In Christchurch, they played against The Warriors.
Soon afterwards there were reports of an incident with a young woman at the team's hotel.
(Excerpt of News footage)
REPORTER: The Cronulla sharks were in action in Christchurch last Sunday night.
(End of Excerpt)
SARAH FERGUSON: It generated a few brief news stories in New Zealand and Australia.
STEVE ROGERS, FORMER CEO CRONULLA SHARKS: We asked if they were aware of any incident that may have sparked such allegations and they are certainly not aware of anything.
SARAH FERGUSON: Four minutes of news footage, a blanket denial from the team's management and the story disappeared from view.
But not for the young woman involved, seven years later the pain is still raw.
CLARE: I do get really upset sometimes yeah but I just. I don't think about it and um I still feel that it's my fault.
(crying) But I know it's not, but I feel that way, so I just try not to think about it otherwise I get too upset.
SARAH FERGUSON: You still think it might be your fault?
CLARE: Just nothing ever happened and um, no one's on my side, so that's how that's just how I feel.
SARAH FERGUSON: In 2002, 19-year-old Clare, as we'll call her, was working part time as a waitress at the Racecourse Hotel on the outskirts of Christchurch.
After finishing work Clare went with two of the players back to their room, one of them started kissing her.
CLARE: I didn't want to you know, make a big deal out of a kiss and even though it was rough and disgusting and I was a piece of meat even at that stage, but it was you know it was you know, it was nothing it was just a kiss.
SARAH FERGUSON: Over the next two hours, at least 12 players and staff came in to the room, six of them had sex with Clare, the others watched. Five days after the event Clare made a complaint to police.
NEVILLE JENKINS, DETECTIVE SGT CHRISTCHURCH POLICE: It's a case that I do remember because of its extraordinary allegation.
SARAH FERGUSON: Neville Jenkins was one of the officers on the case.
Four weeks after the complaint was made, 40 players and staff from Cronulla were interviewed by police.
In their graphic descriptions, those present said she had consented to each and every act. No charges were laid.
SARAH FERGUSON (to Neville Jenkins): So it is the case that a large number of players and others in the Cronulla Sharks confirmed that group sex activity had taken place in that hotel?
NEVILLE JENKINS, DETECTIVE SGT CHRISTCHURCH POLICE: There were people involved with the Cronulla Sharks and their supporting crew confirmed that there was sexual activity with this young woman.
SARAH FERGUSON: Four Corners doesn't say that what took place in room 21 of the Racecourse hotel was sexual assault.
But a woman involved in degrading group sex can still be traumatised whether she consents or not.
In the course of the investigation, Jenkins formed an opinion of Clare.
NEVILLE JENKINS, DETECTIVE SGT CHRISTCHURCH POLICE: Um she was a nice girl. She was young, um naïve, not worldly, just a growing up teenager. But even for 19 she was quite young I felt.
CLARE: They were massive, like ah big Rugby players, I felt that I just had no idea what to do.
There was always hands on me and there was always um, if one person had stopped, someone was touching me and doing something else. There was never a point where I was not being handled.
Every time I looked up, there would be more and more people in the room and um there's lot, lots of guys in the room watching, ah maybe two or three that were on the bed that were doing stuff to me.
SARAH FERGUSON: Can you try and tell me what some of those things were?
CLARE: They flipped me over quite a bit and got out their penises and would put like, put them on my face and stuff and like maybe two guys would rub them on my face and things like that and yeah.
SARAH FERGUSON: What were the others doing while that was happening?
CLARE: They were I don't like know how to say it, um but masturbating yeah themselves while watching.
SARAH FERGUSON: The player she remembers best was there from the beginning.
CLARE: I only remember this whole time, I only remember one player definitely, it was Mattie Johns.
(Excerpt of footage from Logie Awards)
LOGIE VOICEOVER: Accepting the show's fifth Logie are.
(End of Excerpt)
SARAH FERGUSON: Matthew Johns is an NRL personality, he was 30 at the time, a former Knights and State of Origin player, he's best known now for his role on the Channel Nine Footy Show.
He told Four Corners he knew that one day this incident would catch up with him.
CLARE: He laughed and he joked and he very loud and boisterous and thought it was hilarious and you know kept it going.
SARAH FERGUSON: Matthew Johns and fellow player Brett Firman told Four Corners they were the first players to have sex with Clare, Firman said "she was up for it a hundred per cent".
Johns denies he kept it going, saying when he had finished he quote "took a step back."
CLARE: They never spoke to me, they spoke just to themselves, amongst themselves, laughing and thinking it was really funny. When you have sex with someone and it's nice and you talk and you touch and this was awful. This was nothing like, nothing like that.
SARAH FERGUSON: Some players even came into the room through the bathroom window.
CLARE: I had my eyes shut a lot of it and when I opened my eyes there was just a long line at the end of the bed.
SARAH FERGUSON: What was going through your mind when this was happening?
CLARE: I thought that I was, that I was nothing. I thought I was worthless and I thought I was nothing. And I think I was I was in shock. I didn't scream and they used a lot of like mental power over me and, and belittled me and made me feel really small like I was just a little old woman.
SARAH FERGUSON: Towards the end Paul Gallen, the current captain of the Cronulla sharks, went in to see what was happening. Gallen told us it was pretty much all over by then, but nothing bad had happened anyway.
After two hours it ended.
CLARE: I think maybe one of the guys said she's had enough, or something along those lines, like alright guys let's wrap it up she's had enough. And so I put my clothes on and walked out as, yeah.
SARAH FERGUSON: Did anybody talk to you while you were putting your clothes back on?
CLARE: No no one. I was nothing.
SARAH FERGUSON: Afterwards in the car park, Matthew Johns told Four Corners, he went up to Clare and said he was sorry about the other guys coming into the room.
The players continued with their careers, but seven years ago when the Cronulla caravan moved on from Christchurch, it left a young woman alone to deal with confusion and pain.
CLARE: Well for years and years afterwards I was, I was drinking a lot and um crying a lot and losing a lot of friends and just doing quite destructive things to myself and to other people.
SARAH FERGUSON: Did you continue with your studies?
CLARE: I tried to, but I couldn't.
SARAH FERGUSON: Did you did you know what was going on?
CLARE: No, no, no I, I just thought I was, I just thought I was a useless person that I couldn't like. Um I didn't yeah, didn't care about anything and I didn't really care what was happening.
SARAH FERGUSON: How long did that last for?
CLARE: Maybe four or five, five years or more to the end of it um, I wasn't so much drinking heaps and heaps, I was more scared to go out of the house. I was a bit of recluse, didn't want to go out and see the world after that.
NEVILLE JENKINS, DETECTIVE SGT CHRISTCHURCH POLICE: Yeah, I saw a young woman struggling with life. Um I didn't know her prior to this episode but presumably um, I'm led to believe that this is as a result of what happened to her at that time.
SARAH FERGUSON: And has she called you for help at any time during these years?
NEVILLE JENKINS, DETECTIVE SGT CHRISTCHURCH POLICE: Yes, she has.
SARAH FERGUSON: And in what sort of state has she been?
NEVILLE JENKINS, DETECTIVE SGT CHRISTCHURCH POLICE: Yeah distressed.
SARAH FERGUSON: The New Zealand Accident and Compensation Commission found that Clare was suffering from post traumatic stress disorder.
Psychiatrists reported that she was suicidal, had cut her wrists several times and bought a rope to hang herself with.
The ACC funded treatment for her and gave her a weekly payment in compensation.
SARAH FERGUSON: Do you think it will ever go away for you?
CLARE: No never ever, no.
SARAH FERGUSON: Why speak now?
CLARE: I wanted at least their wives or girlfriends to know what they had done at the very least, yeah.
SARAH FERGUSON: Why did you want them to know?
CLARE: Part of me wanted them to know because I was so angry and I wanted their lives destroyed like mine was and part of me wanted them to know so that they could go and meet the better people that wouldn't treat them like that yep.
SARAH FERGUSON: What do you think about those people now?
CLARE: What, if I had a gun I'd shoot them right now. (Crying) I hate them, they're disgusting. I want them dead.