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Social media under fire in Ohio rape case

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(MCT) — DAYTON, Ohio — Shockingly callous tweets and Facebook posts about the alleged rape of a 16-year-old girl by members of the Steubenville High School football team have drawn international attention to a small Ohio town.

An Instagram image showed the unconscious girl being held by boys holding her wrists and ankles. Students tweeted “rape” and “drunk girl” as casually as reporting what they had for breakfast.

But as deeply disturbing as those images are, there is a growing discomfort level over another aspect of the case, which is scheduled for trial before a retired Hamilton County judge on Feb. 13: Has social media dangerously intruded into the lives of innocent people?

Anonymous bloggers and online juries have tried and convicted, it seems, half the citizens of Steubenville. Facebook pages urge Ohio universities to expel members of “The Rape Crew” or to rescind their scholarships — even when the young men in question weren’t charged with a crime or aren’t believed to have been present at the parties where the alleged rape occurred.

In this tangled moral tale, only one thing seems clear. “Social media is turning our justice system on its head,” observed Greene County Common Pleas Judge Stephen Wolaver. “It’s not the criminal justice system we have pursued throughout the course of history — unless you go back to the Salem Witch Trials.”

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said that his office, which is prosecuting the case, is getting intense pressure from both sides as protests and petition drives have been launched. “We have people who are saying ‘Charge everybody!’ as well as locals who believe the case is being tried in the social media. We are the ones doing the investigation and we have a moral obligation to try the case on facts, not on rumors.”

Area judges, prosecutors and legal experts are watching the case closely as a harbinger of things to come. “The whole new social media-type phenomenon affects the criminal justice system from all angles,” said Montgomery County Prosecutor Mathias H. Heck, Jr.

Often the perception of whether the justice system is working or not is based on misinformation and opinion, Heck said, and that information is then disseminated to a vast audience that believes it to be true.

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