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jury finds man guilty of raping prostitutes

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http://www.dailymail.com/News/Kanawha/200908240912?page=1&build=cache

Kanawha County

 

Tuesday August 25, 2009

Jury finds man guilty of raping prostitutes

Defense attorney called women 'tramps' and 'whores'

 

by Cheryl Caswell

Daily Mail staff

 

 

TGRAVLEY_D0908242o67f3.jpg Bob Wojcieszak

Thomas H. Gravely of East Bank was convicted Tuesday of raping prostitutes.

 

 

 

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A jury found Thomas H. Gravely, 31, of East Bank guilty of sexually assaulting Charleston prostitutes, despite a graphic argument by his defense attorney that women willing to sell themselves for sex cannot be raped.

The father of five children and midget football coach did not testify. But jurors watched a taped interview in which he confessed to picking up at least 15-20 prostitutes and holding a knife to their throats or choking them while he had sex with them.

The courtroom was filled with Gravely's family and friends. At least a dozen members of a midget football team -- the Twin City Miners of Marmet -- sat in the hallway just outside the courtroom doors for the entire two days of his trial.

A bailiff decided the youngsters, dressed in matching orange shirts and socks, would not be allowed inside.

A grand jury indicted Gravely last September of multiple counts of first- and second-degree sexual assault. After the guilty verdict was returned, he was taken into custody to await sentencing at a later date.

Jurors found him guilty of five counts of sexual assault on three prostitutes in 2007 and 2008. Those women said Gravely threatened to kill them as he attacked them.

Ed ReBrook, Gravely's defense attorney, called no witnesses. But he summed up his case in a dramatic closing argument to jurors during which he called the victims "tramps" and "whores."

"You cannot rape the willing," ReBrook said. "They got in those automobiles with the intention of having sex for money.

"I would be horrified if any of the women in my life were raped, but I'm talking about decent, honorable women," ReBrook said, and then dramatically raised his voice. "Not whores who have sex with many, many men for money."

Assistant Prosecutor Fred Giggenbach immediately asked Kanawha Circuit Judge Tod Kaufman to stop ReBrook, but he did not.

"They are whores," ReBrook persisted. "That is a perfectly usable word in the English language.

"Finding this man guilty of rape lessens the dignity of every other woman," ReBrook said. "What they have done is turn sex into something disgusting.

"They are not like your wife, your girlfriend or your daughter," he said. "They are street tramps. And what happened to them was, at least in part, their fault.

"If stupidity was a crime, my client would be a three-time loser," ReBrook told the jury. "He may be guilty of assault, but he is not guilty of sexual assault."

ReBrook said the testimony of the three prostitutes, who told in graphic detail how they made their living and how Gravely held a knife to their throats or choked them and forced them to perform various sexual acts, shocked and disgusted him.

One woman, a 32-year-old who said she had an eighth-grade education, had been a prostitute since she was 14 and had a $3,000-a-day drug habit. She was the last witness on Tuesday before jurors began deliberating.

She told the jury that Gravely picked her up about 4:30 a.m. in May 2007 at the corner of Washington and Bream Streets on the West Side.

"He showed me the money," she said. "He said what he wanted. He was a good-looking guy."

She said she noticed two child car seats in the vehicle. He drove her to the parking lot at SportMart and then pulled out a knife and held it to her throat while they had sex.

"He told me if I would be good I wouldn't get hurt," she said.

"You don't know them," she said of the 20 or so men she would go with each night. "It's scary. You don't know if the next car you get in you'll have to jump out of."

None of the women, some of whom said they are no longer prostitutes, minced words while on the witness stand. Using graphic sexual language, they told of lives full of despair, addiction and sadness.

Giggenbach said the law protects them from violent crime just as it protects everyone else.

"That's a wolf right there," Giggenbach said, standing before Gravely and pointing. "A wolf who attacks the weak, the uneducated and the socially crippled, because he knows they are not going to go to the hospital or the police.

"He's a serial rapist, 15 or 20 times in our community," Giggenbach said. "Lurking, stalking, waiting for the weak to come out at night.

"You find him not guilty and you tell this man, 'You go right ahead, anybody in this community can do that,' Giggenbach told jurors.

"Did they agree to go with him?" he asked. "Yes. If he had shown them the switchblade at the beginning? Heck, no."

The prosecution also played for jurors a videotaped interview at the police station in which Gravely admitted to attacking 20 or more prostitutes while using a knife.

Contact writer Cheryl Caswell at [email protected] or 304-348-4832

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Guest s******ecan****

kudos to the jury for ignoring the defense attorneys risible tactics. By the sounds of it he's probably another religious nutjob.

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I'd like to charge the prosecutor, myself :mad: I've been following the case, and sure, he's paid to defend the man, but upholding backwards-ass ideas about blaming the victim?!

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I'd like to charge the prosecutor, myself :mad: I've been following the case, and sure, he's paid to defend the man, but upholding backwards-ass ideas about blaming the victim?!

 

 

thats exactly what I was thinking

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I am glad that the verdict was clear headed. As to the comment about the lawyer being in the wrong. Let me give another point of view.

 

Every suspect has the right to have someone speak for them. That often makes the lawyer look like a bad person by association, but not necessarily. The fact that the horrible argument was not accepted, now means that it can not be used again. The value of precedent.

 

So in other words, by losing, the lawyer has shown the "willingness" because of pay argument is invalid.

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Surely, there are other ways of arguing for your client without resorting to phrases such as "You cannot rape the willing" and "I would be horrified if any of the women in my life were raped, but I'm talking about decent, honorable women" and "Finding this man guilty of rape lessens the dignity of every other woman". He is suggesting that because of their profession, these women do not have the same rights.

 

Let's rephrase. If this was a case of a white man raping a black woman, and the lawyer used the exact same phrasing, it would not be tolerated. Why is it tolerated in this case, instead?

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Guest kaylasexy21 (Closed Account)

A former Metro Transit Police officer who set up a date with a prostitute and showed up for the liaison wearing his uniform was convicted yesterday of raping the woman.

 

With his parents looking on, Darren Way, 32, was found guilty of four counts of second-degree sexual abuse stemming from the encounter in June with the 19-year-old woman at a Dupont Circle inn.

 

It was by all accounts a bizarre episode: a police officer showing up in uniform to have sex with a prostitute, who was, she testified, apprehensive and reluctant but expected to be paid nonetheless.

 

Way didn't pay, she said, claiming he had no money but promising to come back and offering his keys as collateral.

the full story can be viewed in the washingtonpost ill post the linkm very sad when women are not considered people anymore because of there choices in life.i wish he had got life in jail... http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/09/AR2006050901642.html

Edited by kaylasexy21 (Closed Account)
bad grammar hehe

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I'm certain both of these pond-scum's will learn exactly what it feels like to be on the receiving end once they enter the "penal" system.

If there's one thing regular cons truly hate, it's a rapist. They will turn a blind eye to these 2 when the "wolves" go looking for them.

Karma has a way of balancing things, as they will learn.

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Surely, there are other ways of arguing for your client without resorting to phrases such as "You cannot rape the willing" and "I would be horrified if any of the women in my life were raped, but I'm talking about decent, honorable women" and "Finding this man guilty of rape lessens the dignity of every other woman". He is suggesting that because of their profession, these women do not have the same rights.

 

Let's rephrase. If this was a case of a white man raping a black woman, and the lawyer used the exact same phrasing, it would not be tolerated. Why is it tolerated in this case, instead?

 

I agree. I was suspicious that the defense lawyer was actually trying to get the jury to find his client guilty. There could be no great reason for such language, if he wanted to get the sympathy of the jury that was a bloody odd way of going about it. The jury was left with being linked with such outdated views as "blame the victim" which by this time the majority of thinking is that is wrong. No matter what position the victim was in, it is now generally believed (at least out loud) that no one can emphatically state it is okay to blame the victim.

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Of course , we may be overlooking something .... the lawyer may really be that big of an idiot!!! Just because he has a law degree doesn't mean he actually has any brains!!! If I was the accused , I think I would have fired this jerk long before he got the chance to spew out such garbage!!!

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