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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCHANEL MILLER: the woman the system called "Doe," who wrote the words that outlasted the judge.

She was 23. The man who assaulted her was a Stanford swimmer with a scholarship and a courtroom full of character witnesses.
The legal system had a maximum sentence on the table: 14 years.
The judge looked at the young man's future then gave him six months in county jail.
She wrote 7,000 words and read every one of them out loud.
The judge wasn't the one who decided how this story ended.
January 2015, Stanford University. Two graduate students saw a man on top of an unconscious woman behind a dumpster outside a fraternity party. They chased him down. They held him until police arrived.
The woman didn't remember any of it. She woke up in a hospital with pine needles in her hair.
The court called her Emily Doe.
Brock Turner was convicted on three felony counts of sexual assault in March 2016. California law allowed up to 14 years in state prison.
On June 2, 2016, Judge Aaron Persky sentenced him to six months in county jail. He explained that a longer sentence might have "a severe impact" on Turner.
Turner served three months.
Before the sentencing, Doe had written and read a victim impact statement more than 7,000 words, addressed directly to Turner. She opened it: "You don't know me, but you've been inside me, and that's why we're here today."
She described removing pine needles from her own hair and skin in a hospital exam room. She described reading about her own assault online before anyone told her directly what had happened.
On June 3, 2016, BuzzFeed published her full statement.
Within four days, 11 million people had read it.
It was translated into other languages. It was read aloud on the floor of Congress.
Thousands of survivors wrote in to say her words gave them language for their own experiences, some for the first time.
A Stanford law professor named Michele Dauber organized a campaign to remove Judge Persky from the bench.
It took two years.
In June 2018, voters recalled Persky the first time California voters had recalled a judge from office in more than 80 years.
That same year, 2016, the California legislature had already passed new laws closing the loophole Persky's sentence exposed making prison time mandatory for assaulting an unconscious or intoxicated victim, and expanding the legal definition of rape to include digital penetration.
For three years, the world still only knew her as Emily Doe.
In September 2019, she published a memoir. On the cover was her real name: Chanel Miller.
Know My Name became a New York Times bestseller. It won the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Dayton Literary Peace Prize, and the California Book Award.
Layer one: Chanel Miller wrote a single 7,000-word statement that outlasted the sentence a judge handed down, and helped end that judge's career.
Layer two: in just over three years from an unread courtroom statement in June 2016 to a recalled judge in 2018 to a bestselling memoir in 2019 her words reshaped both California law and a national conversation about sexual assault sentencing.
Layer three: as survivors today still weigh whether speaking publicly is worth the cost, her statement remains one of the clearest proofs that a single testimony, written and shared in full, can move further than the courtroom that produced it.
CHANEL MILLER: the woman the system called "Doe," who wrote the words that outlasted the judge.
If her statement gave you language for something you'd never been able to say out loud, tell us even just a little of it in the comments.
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Bgf6iYLXU/
ultralite001
(2,866 posts)How do we hold Krasnov, Krasnov's courts + cronies, + the GOP accountable for allowing
these heinous acts to continue... America is being harmed daily.
Krasnov: "You don't know us..." Your assault needs to stop... NOW.
erronis
(25,118 posts)Many (most?) of us won't go to that outlet to get real information - and this is important information to keep alive.
ancianita
(43,453 posts)--- ... her words reshaped both California law and a national conversation about sexual assault sentencing.
--- ... her statement remains one of the clearest proofs that a single testimony, written and shared in full, can move further than the courtroom that produced it.
Cha
(321,718 posts)What an amazing woman
☮️💙🌻🕯️🕊️
So Fortunate those "two grad students" caught Brock Turner in his vicious, sexual assault act, and chased him down.
Just read this...
Mahao, Swede