One of them left the police station long before the case was solved, and the other who apologized without any punishment seemed to have gone to anti-drugs. The two of them had no idea about the inconsistency of the rape victim’s confession, and would only catch the victim. The author cross-examined. According to the rapist, he committed the case in 2008 early and made a lot of mistakes. He thought he was going to be arrested, but the police found nothing. The level of on-site investigation was also worrying. No knife was found. The 11-year policewoman was able to solve the case when the rapist was already proficient and had almost no flaws. The level was more than a little higher. When the policewoman went to other police stations, she saw the book about rape and said that she had read other related things. So she knows how to talk to the victims, and she also knows that their confessions may be inconsistent. What you have to do is not find the victim’s fault. The most amazing adoptive mother in 2008 found the same case in the news, and other police called This naive, he turned a deaf ear to his eyes, and he was so angry that he could link the case in 2008, and he just made this person out there for three more years and hurt more people.
In the original news investigation: "According to the FBI's statistical report, in 2008, Mary's case was one of four cases deemed unfounded by the Lynnwood police. In the five years from 2008 to 2012, The FBI determined that of the 47 rape cases reported to the Lynnwood police, 10 of them were unfounded, accounting for 21.3% of the total. During the same period, this number was the same type of cases reported by relevant state agencies. Five times (4.3%). Reid said his police department is becoming more and more cautious about cases like Marie that are labeled "without facts." "I can take the liberty to say that we are more active in investigating cases than other departments, and now we are extremely careful about the use of our right to close cases."
"Before Mary was reported to be victimized, a manual on the challenges and sensitivities of investigating rape cases has been drafted by sex crime experts. The manual is applicable to all police departments and contains detailed descriptions of common mistakes (that may occur during investigations).
The investigator’s admonition is that no real victim should be presupposed to be hysterical, rather than calm; nor should they be assumed to show clear signs and every detail of physical injury. Some victims confuse subtleties and even reverse their confessions. The police should not get lost in the inherent stereotypes—for example, believing that an adult victim will be more credible than an adolescent victim. The police should not question the victim or threaten to use polygraph equipment. "
You can look at the original news investigation, many of which were not photographed, searching for incredible rape cases
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