A lawyer for former Stanford University swimmer Brock Turner argued this week that his client’s attempted rape conviction should be overturned because he was practicing “sexual outercourse,” which the lawyer described as a form of “safe sex.”
Turner never intended to rape an unconscious woman, he said. The lawyer cited witness accounts that Turner was “violently thrusting but fully clothed” when two Swedish graduate students found him on top of a half-naked, intoxicated woman in 2015.
But at least one member of a three-justice appelate panel wasn’t buying attorney Eric Malthaup’s argument.
“I absolutely don’t understand what you are talking about,” Justice Franklin D. Elia told the attorney in a California appeals court in San Jose.
“I absolutely don’t understand what you are talking about.”
The panel has 90 days to issue a ruling. If Turner wins his appeal, the Ohio resident may be able to erase his status as a lifetime Tier III sex offender in the state, the Dayton Daily News reported. The designation is Ohio’s highest for a sex offender, the report said.
California Assistant Attorney General Alisha Carlile argued that Multhaup had presented a “far-fetched version of events” that didn’t support the facts of the case.
Brock Turner, Stanford student convicted of rape, practiced ‘sexual outercourse,’ attorney says https://t.co/I8OS7n6IVC pic.twitter.com/LzXDWPhtHE
— Dayton Daily News (@daytondailynews) July 26, 2018