The_Viper
Well-known member
When she reported it the next morning, she gave a sample which showed no alcohol at all, and experts estimate that she was about 2.5 times the legal drive limit (so, what, 3-4 large glasses of wine?) at the height of the evening (before she went with the defendants), which should not be enough to induce amnesia. All of the witnesses agree that she was slurring her speech and stumbling, but perfectly capable of talking to people.
Although possible, it's also slightly strange that the jury decided that one defendant was guilty and the other not, given that they each had sex with her within a relatively short period of time (during which she didn't get any more intoxicated). The case seems to have turned on whether or not she was too drunk to consent (rather than whether she actually said yes). It's therefore pretty odd that between one finishing and the next starting, she lost capacity. Very odd.
Read the case if you want to, and the appeal. It's a lot less clear-cut than you might think.
Although possible, it's also slightly strange that the jury decided that one defendant was guilty and the other not, given that they each had sex with her within a relatively short period of time (during which she didn't get any more intoxicated). The case seems to have turned on whether or not she was too drunk to consent (rather than whether she actually said yes). It's therefore pretty odd that between one finishing and the next starting, she lost capacity. Very odd.
Read the case if you want to, and the appeal. It's a lot less clear-cut than you might think.