I just received this press release from Margaret Valois of SAVE Services
PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Rebecca
Stewart
Telephone:
513-479-3335
Email: info@saveservices.org
Surging Public Support for
Due Process and the Presumption of Innocence
WASHINGTON / November 13,
2018 – Several non-partisan, national surveys point to widespread public concern
about the erosion of the presumption of innocence and due process in our
country, the problem of false allegations, and a pressing need to reinvigorate
these bedrock principles of fairness in our legal system.
Public concern was first
spotlighted in a 2011 SAVE survey that reported 9.7% of persons report they have
been falsely accused of sexual assault, domestic violence, or child abuse. One
in six of the respondents personally knew someone who said he or she had been
falsely accused of domestic violence, child abuse, or sexual
assault.1
A 2013 survey commissioned
by the Center for Prosecutor Integrity found that 66.8% of respondents believe
the presumption of innocence is becoming lost in our legal system. In addition,
42.8% of persons say prosecutorial misconduct has become widespread.2
A 2017 YouGov poll revealed
strong support for the restoration of due process in campus sexual assault
cases. The survey queried whether “Students accused of crimes on college
campuses should receive the same civil liberties from their colleges that they
receive in the court system.” Among the 1,200 persons responding, 65% of
Democrats, 77% of Republicans, and 67% of Independents expressed agreement with
the statement.3
A poll by Ipsos/NPR found
80% of men and 73% of women believe that those who are accused of sexual
harassment should be given the benefit of the doubt until proven otherwise. The
survey was conducted October 22-23, 2018 with a sample of 1,003
adults.4
Much of the shift in public
perceptions can be linked to the controversies associated with the #MeToo
movement.
Morning Consult recently
found 57% of U.S. adults say they are equally worried about men facing false
allegations of sexual assault as they are about women facing sexual assault.
Overall support for the #MeToo movement has dropped 2% over the last year, the
survey found.5
A survey conducted by
YouGov and the Economist in October revealed 18% of Americans now think false
accusations of sexual assault are a bigger problem than attacks that go
unreported or unpunished, compared with 13% one year ago. These shifts in public
opinion against complainants have been stronger among women than men, the
Economist noted.6
SAVE has developed a Due
Process Statement that urges members of Congress to “speak out in support of
Constitutionally rooted due process rights on campus.” Over 285 law professors,
scholars, and state lawmakers have signed the Statement. SAVE invites additional
state lawmakers to become co-signers. For more information, contact mvalois@saveservices.org
.
1 comment:
If you ask men , they all think they are falsely accused, including Weinstein, Nassar, Kavanaugh. Men shamelessly lie when it comes to admitting the sexual abuse they commit (they have a good reason to) so any surveys of this sort are meaningless and you know it.
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