Jane Doe told Missoula police officers that she had fallen asleep in Mohmand's hotel room and been awoken to find him on top of her, according to the court document.
Then the article says:
Doe and a female friend had met Mohmand and two other unidentified men at a bar called Badlander, where they left in search of a fictitious house party, Monday's affidavit of probable cause says. She went back to Mohmand's hotel room where they had sexual intercourse, with Doe feeling that he "wasn't going to let me leave" because he "held her to the bed by placing his hand around her neck and using force to do so," the filing says. Doe "had significant red bruising and red marks on the side of her neck," the document adds.
So she was worried Mo wasn't going to let her leave so she takes a nap and then wakes up with him doing what he does best? Or did they have some fun and then she went to sleep and woke up with him already starting round 2?
But what I really want to know is, why did Yahoo file this under sports?
The scandal started, like many scandals do these days, in the social media. On Saturday, October 12, amidst the school’s Homecoming Weekend festivities, photos and a video of two young people engaged in a public sex act near the campus–the man on his knees performing oral sex on the woman while she leaned against a plate-glass window, half-sitting on its ledge–showed up online and promptly spread on Twitter.
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On Sunday night, the woman in the photos, a 20-year-old Ohio University student, contacted Athens police to say that she had been sexually assaulted. The news media picked up the story; an October 16 report on the local television channel, WBNS-10TV, opened with the alarming announcement, “An Ohio university student says she was the victim of a rape. Making it even worse, someone photographed the alleged assault and shared it on social media.” Within the OU community, there was widespread outrage, particularly at reports that at least a dozen people had witnessed the act. OU senior Allie Erwin lamented to 10-TV, ” Our first instinct as a community was not to intervene and help this woman, but to post it on social media, and make a mockery of probably the most traumatic experience of her life.
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While Athens police chief Tom Pyle warned against a rush to judgment, noting that the witnesses “may not have realized” they were seeing an assault and, in fact, that no assault may have taken place, the outraged student were not mollified. Said Erwin, “She obviously wasn’t okay with what happened. It was rape. She reported it to the police as rape.”
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Meanwhile, the photos and videos–initially taken down after the rape complaint–resurfaced.
. They appeared to show a fully consensual encounter; the woman was seen smiling, flipping back her hair, at one point putting her hand on the back of the man’s head, and even posing for the camera with a grin on her face. Witnesses confirmed that, while both participants were clearly drunk, the “victim” was not incapacitated and “seemed like she was enjoying it”; she also left with the man afterwards, walking unassisted.
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February's broad daylight attack and rape of a visiting brunette co-ed stunned and scared the University of California-Santa Cruz campus. Now, prosecutors say, the claim was all a hoax perpetrated by a twisted 20-year-old who used Craigslist to find a man who would abuse her in exchange for sex.
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After the act, Morgan Triplett called police and claimed she had been raped and assaulted by a stranger. The allegations set off a frantic 11-day search for her supposed attacker.
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Triplett, a University of California-Santa Barbara student, had been visiting the Santa Cruz campus for a lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender conference, the Register Pajaronian reported.
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Triplett eventually admitted to the hoax and now faces up to six months in jail if found guilty of filing a false police report.
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"They had sex and afterwards she used a cell phone screen reflection as a mirror to see if the injuries were bad enough. (Triplett) then directed him to hit her some more," KSBW-TV reported court records say.
At first the article says:
Then the article says:
So she was worried Mo wasn't going to let her leave so she takes a nap and then wakes up with him doing what he does best? Or did they have some fun and then she went to sleep and woke up with him already starting round 2?
But what I really want to know is, why did Yahoo file this under sports?
Man, I went through my list of fake rape articles, and there are so many.
(This is an older article unrelated to this recent accusation but it's most absurd proveably absurd one).
https://www.mindingthecampus.org/2013/11/05/is_this_a_campus_rape_well_no/
Or this one -
https://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/california-co-ed-false-rape-claims-wanting-abuse-cops-article-1.1305113
They're actually sick in the head and enjoy ruining people's lives. Change my mind.