NYC 'Rape Cops' Juror Suggests The Woman Consented
LatestPatrick Kirkland, a juror who voted to acquit former NYPD cops Kenneth Moreno and Franklin Mata of almost all charges in the notorious rape trial, has written a long piece on the experience for Gothamist. In it, he defends the jury from charges that they let a rapist go free, somewhat explains why they doubted the woman’s testimony — and wonders if Moreno and the woman “hit it off” and Moreno “thought [it] was consensual.”
The longform account (which Gothamist is selling on its website in pdf and Kindle form) includes interviews with some of the principals, including famous defense lawyer Joe Tacopina, alongside the jury deliberations and testimony excerpts.
Kirkland describes himself as a white male who works as an advertising copywriter and lives on the Upper West Side. At first, he seems sure that Moreno raped the woman, whom he and his partner were called to help when a cab driver called to say she was too drunk to get to her home. Moreno’s “demeanor begged for a label, so I give him one: rapist.”
What follows is a detailed description of how the jurors listened to the woman’s testimony with sniffles, how they studied Facebook photos of her partying that night, how they agonized over the lesser charges. How Moreno did himself no favors with saying “I don’t kiss and tell” on the stand, and insisted that all he did was cuddle the woman and sing “Living on a Prayer.” Much space is given to the woman confronting Moreno outside the precinct and asking him thirteen times if he used a condom, an undercover cop at her side; he denies anything happened every time until the one he says that he did. He claims it was to stop her from making a scene. Much less space is given to the fact that Moreno falsified a 911 call in order to return to her apartment a total of four times — for what, exactly?
It takes awhile to get to how they decided whether or not Moreno raped her. Here is a telling exchange.
“She said she woke up to being penetrated,” Four repeats.
I turn directly to Four. Hours have passed. We’ve gone in circles, and Four has seemingly made the penetration line her new mantra. My elbows hit my knees and I speak slowly.
“You do know that penetration can mean sex, right?” I ask.
I can hear her mind racing, speeding toward the light of reason. “Yes.”
“And you do know that sex does not equal rape?”
She stares down at her notepad.
“She said… she felt the penetration.”
“This is getting nowhere,” Seven says. We’ve hit a wall.
Sex doesn’t equal rape, except when it does: According to the New York state penal code, “Lack of consent, along with forcible compulsion, includes circumstances when the victim clearly expressed they did not consent to the act of intercourse or by means of age, mental disability, mental incapacitation or being physically helpless and a reasonable person in the defendant’s situation would have understood the victim’s words, actions or condition.” Physically helpless “means that a person is unconscious or for any other reason is physically unable to communicate unwillingness to an act.” If being unable to walk from a cab, covered in vomit, and requiring police attention isn’t “physically helpless,” what is? There’s a reason Moreno never even tried to argue that there was consensual sex — in the absence of DNA evidence that any took place, despite the fact that he says he cradled her while she was wearing nothing but a bra and no evidence of that remains — he didn’t have to.