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A Saraland, Alabama, woman who filed a
rape complaint after a 4th of July date turned ugly was ordered to provide a
urine sample for a drug test in Mobile County District Court on July 9. The
order came after Judge Delano Palughi ruled favorably on a defense motion asking
the court to force the accuser to submit to a drug test. Defense attorney Rick
Yelverton, representing 26-year-old Emanuel DeWitt, implied that the woman could
have been under the influence of drugs at the time of the alleged rape.
Yelverton argued that if the woman was on drugs when the incident occurred, the
test results could go "to her character and to her ability to recall what
happened that night."
But while a urine sample from the woman
was provided, it has not been tested. After hearing furious objections from
prosecutors, Mobile Circuit Court Judge Joseph "Rusty" Johnston ruled on July 25
that the sample would not be tested now, but would be turned over to the Alabama
Department of Forensic Sciences. Johnston refused to order the urine sample
destroyed, saying he wanted it preserved as possible evidence in the case.
Prosecutor Ashley Rich, lamenting that
such a precedent could deter other victims from coming forward, moved to have
Johnston overturn Palughi's earlier order. "The victim is not on trial here,"
she wrote in her motion to vacate the order, "and the fact of whether or not the
victim was under the influence of controlled substances at the time of the rape
has no relevance to whether or not she was raped." At a news conference outside
the courtroom, Rich added that forcing a victim of a crime to take a drug test
"sends a message to other victims." A nurse or other state employee, for
example, might not report a crime if she feared being tested for drugs and
possibly losing her job. "We're very concerned," she said.
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