Raw Deal: A Question Of Consent

2001
Raw Deal: A Question Of Consent
7.4| 1h30m| en| More Info
Released: 20 January 2001 Released
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Synopsis

A documentary about the circumstances during a party at a University of Florida fraternity that led up to what may or may not have been a rape. Interspersed with actual footage shot by the fraternity brothers on the night of the incident, including the sexual acts. This video led to the police not pressing charges and the involvement of NOW, and eventually led to the fraternity getting kicked off campus.

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Colourofthelife On Saturday February 27th 1999 Lisa Gier King ran from the Delta Chi fraternity house nearly naked and crying to Theta Chi, a fraternity house nearby. She was given clothes and a phone to call her mother and grandmother who were on the scene in minutes. Lisa's mother called the police and after reporting rape, Lisa was carried away from the University of Florida Police Department on a stretcher with a neck brace.Within hours of the report, UP officers made up their mind about Lisa's report. As with many rape cases, we believe UP never even began an investigation of a sexual assault and were against the alleged victim from the start. They yelled at Lisa's mother when she came to get her car, saying her daughter a waste of their time. On Monday, March 1st 1999, Lisa was arrested by UP for "falsifying a police report" and taken away in handcuffs to the county jail.Like many women who report rape, Lisa Gier King has been on trial and punished for coming forward from day one. Women have to prove ourselves to everyone, while men who call it rape and even appear to be planning it on the tape, have some sort of credibility Lisa does not. This is sexist. Her "actions" and "behavior" have been the focus point, while few questioned Mike Yahraus, Tony Marzullo, Leo Yuque and the other men of Delta Chi's actions. They have not even been questioned alone by the State Attorney; many witnesses have not ever been interrogated, by anyone.And this week, Judge Chance has released the tape to the press and decided after a viewing of it by himself that "nothing on the tape would deem her a victim." We disagree. We are tired of the good old' boys being the ones to make the decisions in this case and we are tired of our "justice" system punishing women who come forward to report rape. We are tired of men in power ignoring women and our rights. We believe Judge Chance's actions are an insult and a complete violation of Lisa's rights as a victim. The officers at UP, Rod Smith and Bill Cervone of the State Attorney's and Judge Chance have done a disservice to all women by punishing Lisa King and ignoring the report of rape.If the police had demanded a test for date rape drugs and searched the house for evidence, they might have gotten closer to the truth of what happened that night. We believe Lisa was drugged with a drug common on UF campus. Her behavior on the tape and the black outs she says she experienced concur with the affects of "roofies," a common date rape drug.We believe that a closer examination of the tape during the alleged rape shows a defenseless, intoxicated woman fighting with what she has and men encouraging rape: she is pushing him, moving his hands, slapping him, crossing her legs, diverting the men from her vagina, using her sarcasm as a weapon. The Campus National Organization for Women believes victims use many tactics to try to get offenders to stop hurting them. Women should be believed and supported when we come forward, not punished. We would like the men of Delta Chi to answer to their behavior on the tape for once.At one point, we hear Lisa repeat the word "stop. stop. stop. stop" while Mike Yahraus is penetrating her and holding her legs back. We do not think that is "clearly consensual" as UP claims. At one point, we believe Lisa is being choked, you can hear her gagging and then gives up fighting for fear of her life and Mike says "What do you want, your circulation back?" Later he says, "you are submitted." She asks him while we believe he is forcing his penis into her, "Does that make you feel like a man?" "Is that what you gotta do, pin me down?" as she pushes his hands away from her vagina and tries to cross her legs. At one point she says, "I guess there is nothing I can do." And it sounds like he says "You're right, there isn't." When she fights, he pushes her down.In addition to all of this, the men call it exactly what we think it is "RAPE." They call their tape "the raping of a white trash crack-head bitch" and they clearly see her resistance and comment on it "notice the struggle of the hands" and "get away from her hole, man" At one point the men say "Power, Power, Power," while Mike Yahraus chants "man at work."
diva_2002 I do not have any sympathy for Lisa. To go to a frat party and perform sexual and oral acts on another woman and many boys, does she really expect these "men" to respect her when they believe they are paying for her services. It disgusted me how these frat boys just used her body. They took advantage of her intoxication. She chose to stay at the party and chose to drink more. Be accountable for the decisions you make - to prance around totally naked and displaying your privates, you really expect men to care for your welfare - not take advantage of you? The profession she was in makes me think that all prostitutes are raped because they are only doing this for money (very few do it for the pleasure of sex) therefore the performing act of sex is done against their will because in desperate times they cannot choose their customers. These boys need to have more respect for women regardless of their "class". I don't see Lisa as a crack head whore white trash but a woman with low self esteem that made a wrong decision to trust the frat organizer.
edp01hm This is a very thought provoking film. It disturbs the idea that the justice system can simply discover the truth of what happened and shows clearly how instead the system constructs the truth of what happened. By juxtaposing video footage of a rape with extracts from interviews with the survivor and a friend of the attacker a complex picture emerges that forced me to rethink 'consent'.I think it is important to see this film but it is very hard to watch. You are literally seeing someone being raped.
Mario Xavier I found this to be a very serious and deep piece. I did not find the material to be needlessly graphic but I admit it was hard to watch at times. This documentary shares a very introspective look at politics and law. I was most impressed to find audience members debating the films' themes as it played.