A young mother in the U.K. was given a shockingly lenient sentence after being convicted of a heinous crime. Was justice really served?
When a judge in the U.K. sentenced 21-year-old Loren Morris with only 12 months of prison time,
he said, "I have come to the conclusion that due to the concern and
embarrassment caused to both you and your family that you will not be
offending again." By the sounds of that, you'd think the young mother
had been sentenced for vandalism or theft. Her crime? Morris raped a
child over 50 times. The abuse started when the victim was only 8 years
old and Morris was 16, and continued for two years.
Having sex is something you do when you're capable of consent
"Loren Morris raped a child, and there's no reason to soften the blow of that statement."
This case has been referred to as a young woman having sex with a
boy. An 8-year-old boy, regardless of whether or not he's bragged about
it, is not capable of consenting to sexual
intercourse. I have an
8-year-old son. He isn't capable of remembering to bring his lunch box
onto the bus. He has trouble discerning lies from truth. He believes in
the tooth fairy. He's a child. Loren Morris raped a child, and there's
no reason to soften the blow of that statement.
This wasn't a love affair
While asking the judge to spare her a prison sentence entirely,
Morris' defense attorney said, "Her immaturity at 21 means she cannot
accept the facts yet." If a 21-year-old mother is supposedly too
immature to face reality, why is an 8-year-old boy being portrayed as a
willing partner in an underage sex affair? Now 14, the boy was overheard
bragging about what Morris had done to him. We shouldn't be taking cues
from a teen's distorted point of view on sexual abuse. We absolutely
cannot afford to view child rape through a romanticized lens simply
because a female perpetrator abused a male victim.
Why are we sympathizing with the perpetrator of a heinous crime?
Loren Morris doesn't look like the sex offenders that show up on
online directories — but that shouldn't change the way she's treated.
While she was 16 at the time of her crime, what she did was just as
damaging and heinous as what those stereotypical sex offenders have
done. Morris now has a child of her own — and that doesn't erase her
crime. Nor is it some kind of insurance against Morris taking
inappropriate interest in a child again in the future. The judge
acknowledged Morris' embarrassment while failing to weigh in on the
long-lasting trauma she caused a young boy while raping him repeatedly
over the span of two years. An adult who raped a child will walk out of
jail in 12 months. Where's the justice in that?
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