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Scott Dirks's avatar

What bothers me the most about people's reaction to the story of a ten-year-old girl needing an abortion is that the vast majority of those, like Ms. Young, who doubt it happened base their doubt on the erroneous belief that the idea of a ten-year-old getting pregnant is so unlikely.

I have been a county-level prosecutor for almost three decades, recently (mostly) retired. The last few years I was practicing full-time I specialized in child-maltreatment cases, primarily sexual assaults. Over the course of my entire career I have been assigned literally hundreds of child SA cases. I also spent two years as our county's juvenile court prosecutor.

In that capacity I have worked closely with prosecutors around my state who also specialize in these cases, Forensic Nurse Examiners (nurses who conduct physical examinations of children who report being sexually or otherwise physically abused, looking for evidence of abuse), law enforcement officers and social workers. Anyone who has worked in this field for any length of time can easily come up with dozens cases they themselves handled where there was a very young victim of sexual assault. It is also not very rare anymore for girls as young as nine to get their first period.

Over twenty years ago when I was in juvenile court we had a 13-year-old runaway who was pregnant with her second child.

A few years ago I prosecuted a case where the child victim was vaginally raped by a cousin when she was ten years old. She was afraid she might be pregnant because she had gotten her period a few months earlier (she wasn't.)

I had another case a few years ago where the victim had been raped by her stepfather and stepbrother--repeatedly. She was seven when we interviewed her but according to the brother (he confessed) the assaults had been going on since she was four or five.

I am happy to report that all three of these guys were convicted.

I have no idea whether this Ohio/Indiana case is accurate, but I can say that based on my experience and the experience of those with whom I have worked over the years, it is extremely plausible.

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Lewis Grotelueschen's avatar

If the story of the 10 year old is to be a morality tale about the mainstream media, it is a complex story. After all, it is the heart of the mainstream media, The Washington Post, that is raising doubts about the story. To me, this is a good news story about the media. Demanding that reporters never make a mistake is an unrealistic expectation. The media having mechanisms to correct mistakes is a critical part of the system, and that mechanism seems to have been set in motion.

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