Sponsored Links
-->

Friday, May 11, 2018

Kathy Shelton speaks out about rape case involving Clinton | Fox ...
src: media2.foxnews.com

Kathy Shelton (born 1962) is an American sexual assault survivor.


Video Kathy Shelton



Early life

Shelton was raised by a single mother in Springdale, Arkansas, who was "very strict about her relationships with members of the opposite sex."


Maps Kathy Shelton



1975 attack

In 1975, at 12, Shelton was raped by two men in Arkansas. One of the men accused of raping her was 41-year-old defendant Thomas Alfred Taylor whose court-appointed criminal defense lawyer was 27-year-old Hillary Clinton (then known as Hillary Rodham) in her first-time appearance as courtroom litigator. Clinton has since stated that she had previously requested to be removed from the case.


Hillary Clinton defends rapist of 12yo Kathy Shelton - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


Trial and aftermath

Appointment of defense attorney

Clinton said that she was initially asked to do the job as a favor to prosecutor Mahlon Gibson who recommended her to the trial judge Maupin Cummings since the defendant wanted a female defense attorney.

"I had some really tough clients. I had one appear, a prosecutor called me years ago, said that he had a guy who was accused of rape...and the guy wanted a woman lawyer... Would I do it as a favor..."

Gibson stated in 2014 that Clinton had no choice but to defend the defendant after she was appointed by the judge in the case. At the time, she was working at the legal aid clinic at the University of Arkansas and represented the defendant for free. Clinton has said that she requested removal from the case.

Pretrial proceedings

Clinton stated in an affidavit she had received information that Shelton was emotionally unstable and had a tendency to seek out older men and engage in fantasizing.

"I have been informed that the complainant is emotionally unstable with a tendency to seek out older men and to engage in fantasizing. I have also been informed that she has in the past made false accusations about persons, claiming they had attacked her body. Also that she exhibits an unusual stubbornness and temper when she does not get her way."

Moreover, in this same affidavit, Clinton stated:

"I have also been told by an expert in child psychology that children in early adolescence tend to exaggerate or romanticize sexual experiences and that adolescents with disorganized families, such as the complainant, are even more prone to such behavior."

Trial proceedings

Based on court documents obtained by CNN and Clinton's account in her 2003 memoir Living History, Clinton won a plea deal for Taylor, securing a significantly reduced charge and sentence, based on the prosecution's loss of critical items of evidence so that the semen and blood samples found in the defendant's underwear could not be used as evidence at the trial for the patch of underwear tested had been discarded.

Taylor, who pleaded to unlawful fondling of a child, was sentenced to one year in prison, with two months reduced for time served. He died in 1992.

Shelton: Unable to have children after the rape

In television intereviews in 2016, Shelton stated that she had been in a coma after the incident, and she was fortunate to have survived. She stated that directly after the rape, a doctor told her that the internal damages from the rape left her unable to conceive and bear children, or "99 per cent unlikely" to be able to have children

Clinton's attack on the rape victim's credibilty

In 2008, Andrew Schepard,the Director of Hofstra Law School's Center for Children, Families and the Law, said. "[The rapist] was lucky to have [Ms. Clinton] as a lawyer ... In terms of what's good for the little girl? It would have been hell on the victim. But that wasn't Hillary's problem."

After Shelton became aware that Clinton had been the criminal defense lawyer of the defendant in her case decades earlier, Shelton stated in 2007 that she herself bore no ill will toward Clinton for having had to act as her assailant's court-appointed criminal defence lawyer in the rape case, saying "I have to understand that she was representing Taylor... Hillary was just doing her job."

But as she re-examined the case her opinion shifted. "I started seeing where I had really been stomped in the ground. I didn't really know what to do about it. I just figured life would have to go on and I would have to live with it," she said. It was after hearing Clinton discussing the case in previously unpublished tapes that Shelton decided to speak out publicly.

In 2008, Shelton told Newsday magazine that Taylor raped her, and she had no interest in a relationship with him. She said, "It's not true, I never sought out older men - I was raped". It was after hearing Clinton discussing the case in previously unpublished tapes that Shelton decided to speak out publicly.

Leaked audio recording

In the audio Clinton is heard laughing once after recounting that the defendant's passing of a polygraph test "forever destroyed" her faith in such tests (due to her personal belief that the defendant was guilty), and laughing again at the prosecution team as Clinton recounted her disbelief at their procedural failureas she had hoped:

"But you know what was sad, the prosecutors had evidence, among which was his underwear... His underwear, which was bloody. Sent it down to the crime lab... [unintelligible]. The crime lab took the pair of underpants, neatly cut out the part that they were going to test... tested it... Came back with the result of what kind of blood it was, what was mixed in with it, then sent the pants back with a hole in it as evidence. So I got an order to see the evidence and the prosecutor didn't want me to see the evidence. I had to go to Maupin Cummings and convince Maupin that yes indeed I had a right to see the evidence before it was presented. So they presented the underpants with a hole in it. I said, "What kind of evidence is that!?" You know, a pair of underpants with a hole in it. Of course, the crime lab had thrown away the piece they'd cut out. It was really odd. I mean, I plea bargained it down because it turned out they didn't have any evidence... But I took, I happened to be going to New York and I took the underpants with me, I got a special court order. And I went to Brooklyn, where this man whose name I now cannot remember who had shared in the Nobel Prize for his work on the RH factor and was one of the premier investigators who deal with blood, who had retired from Sloan-Kettering or someplace up there... And so the sort of the story through the grapevine was if you get him interested in the case then you know you had the foremost expert in the world willing to testify so that it came out the way you wanted it to come out. So I wrote him and got an appointment to see him and took a taxi over... Got through the gates, got into his office... And he sat at his little desk and I pulled out my underpants you know, gave it to him and he started analyzing, looking for fibers, you know magnifying glass and all that stuff. He said, you know, "Can't prove anything!" Can see a slight trace but it wouldn't be enough to test, all that.So I wrote back told Mahlor Gibson that I had... well, sorry I can't remember his name but I cut out who's who and I wrote all that stuff and I handed it to Mahlor Gibson and I said, "Well this guy's ready to come from New York to prevent this miscarriage of justice!" [laughter]"


Fox News on Twitter:
src: pbs.twimg.com


Politics

In 2016 Shelton received worldwide media attention when she changed her stance and spoke out against Clinton in a surprise press conference held by Donald Trump before the second presidential debate between him and Hillary Clinton. Also attending the conference were Juanita Broaddrick, Paula Jones and Kathleen Willey.


Flashback: Hillary Laughed on Tape About Rape of 12-Year-Old Girl ...
src: www.frontpagemag.com


References


Fox News on Twitter:
src: pbs.twimg.com


External links

Kathy Shelton on Twitter

Source of article : Wikipedia