Jul 25, 2018 · Brock Turner's lawyer Eric Multhaup made the novel argument Tuesday in a state appellate court in San Jose, California, which appeared only to confuse the three-judge panel.
Jul 25, 2018 · Attorney Eric Multhaup argued that Turner was engaged in "sexual outercourse" and did not demonstrate that he intended to rape the victim, according to NBC Bay Area.
Jul 19, 2016 · The defense attorney, Mike Armstrong, told BuzzFeed News Tuesday the woman "stated earlier" that she had no memory of either the assault or of Turner so "any questioning would have been useless." A transcript of the woman's testimony was released Tuesday afternoon by the Santa Clara County Superior Court. Here's a portion of the cross-examination:
Jan 24, 2020 · Why did Turner’s attorney (Armstrong) fail to raise the Voluntary Intoxication Defense? A Stanford law professor has been engaged in an ongoing false information campaign against Brock. Santa Clara County District Attorney’s office distorted the case and may have engaged in other inappropriate actions.
The California judge who was recalled after handing down a sentence seen as too lenient for Stanford swimmer Brock Turner after his conviction for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman and who worked briefly as a Bay Area high school coach has been fired from that job, the district announced Wednesday.Sep 12, 2019
The conviction and sentence Turner, who maintained the encounter was consensual, was found guilty in 2016 of three felony charges: assault with intent to commit rape of an intoxicated/unconscious person, penetration of an intoxicated person and penetration of an unconscious person.Sep 24, 2019
Opponents of the sentencing found it galling that Turner never explicitly apologized for his crimes and that the prosecution's sentencing memo revealed he drank alcohol and used psychedelic drugs while in high school though he had claimed in his letter to the Court that he “had been shattered by party culture” at ...Jun 6, 2018
Dan Turner, who urged the sentencing judge to reconsider his son's jail time for probation, comes from a military background and used to work as a civilian contractor for the United States Air Force, according to military documents. Turner was charged with assisting on technology projects needed to help build weaponry.Jun 9, 2016
She was sexually assaulted in 2015 by Brock Turner, a former Stanford University athlete, now a convicted felon. Known during the contentious trial as Emily Doe, a name used to protect her identity, Chanel Miller would become an anonymous icon for assault survivors the world over.Aug 9, 2020
Like Turner, Persky was a Stanford athlete. (He played lacrosse.) Matthew Kells posted a sign in front of his house reading, “Vote yes to recall Judge Persky.” He said he was disgusted that Turner sexually assaulted an unconscious woman behind a dumpster and received only a six-month sentence.Jun 6, 2018
Chanel MillerVictim Of Brock Turner Sexual Assault, Chanel Miller, Reveals Her Identity Chanel Miller introduced herself to the public Tuesday ahead of the release of her memoir, Know My Name, later in the month.Sep 4, 2019
That's a desperate, immature man's defense He is ludicrously attempting to say that it was “outercourse." His attorney, Eric Multhaup, describes this as a version of "safe sex," where both parties are fully clothed. He's arguing that Turner did not intend to rape his unconscious victim, because he was fully dressed.Jul 26, 2018
Multhaup described "outercourse" as an activity that does not involve vaginal sex and as a "version of safe sex."
California's 6th District Court of Appeal has 90 days to issue a ruling, although the judges on Tuesday appeared to be skeptical of the defense's arguments, The Associated Press reported.
Alcohol Use and Abuse on College and University Campuses: A core issue associated with the Brock Turner case is the rampant use and abuse of alcohol on college and university campuses. According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, a college freshman’s first six weeks of college life, stand out as a time of harmful alcohol intake and its resultant undesirable effects and events. Studies show that approximately 50% of student sexual assaults involved alcohol. Of these, 46% of the victims had ingested alcohol, as did 69% of the perpetrators.
Miller, who was an intoxicated twenty-two (22) year old adult college graduate, and not a member of the Stanford community, met Brock Turner, a nineteen (19) year old Stanford freshman, in January 2015, at a Stanford Fraternity party, and the incident that occurred between them led to the prosecution and conviction of Turner for sexual assault, and a six (6) month jail sentence. Some media reports regarding the incident, criminal charges, trial, sentencing, and jail sentence have been distorted, inaccurate, malevolent, false, and untrue. On the eve of the release of Miller’s book, which will enable Miller to monetize the incident at Turner’s expense, and receive from a publisher what may possibly be a million dollars or more, the familiar admonition of an iconic crime detective television series, Lt. Joe Friday of Dragnet, is instructive: “Just the facts, ma’am”…This report provides facts in the Trial Record not disseminated (widely, or perhaps at all) by the mainstream media demonstrating that Turner was not guilty of criminal conduct in any of his interactions with Miller.
Stanford defines plagiarism as follows: “For purposes of the Stanford University Honor Code, plagiarism is defined as the use, without giving reasonable and appropriate credit to or acknowledging the author or source, of another person’s original work, whether such work is made up of code, formulas, ideas, language, research, strategies, ...
Brock Turner is registered as a sex offender under Megan’s Law. He is required to register as a sex offender for life, according to court documents filed in his case. Now 24 years old, he is living in Bellbrook, Ohio, according to his sex offender registration. He is registered under Ohio’s sex offender database.
Brock Turner’s mugshot from the night of his arrest in January 2015. (Stanford University)
As of 2021, Turner works for a cooling technology company in his native Ohio. Per The Daily Mail , Brock’s entry-level job earns him $12 an hour. Turner lives in his parent’s home in Bellbrook, Ohio, and drives a 2008 Chrysler.
Brock was, from the outside at least, an outstanding student and a future star. He’d joined Stanford from Oakwood High School on a swimming scholarship.