Honestly, I'm suprised they actually bothered to apprehend him after all this time. It's not like he's been running across the world like The Fugitive, donning disguises and evading the government at every turn. He's a major film director, they could've captured him at any time.
I assume they've been waiting for him to leave France so he could get extradited?
after 32 year should he be taken back to usa for his crime? after all he rape a 13 year! your take?
He did time for his crime in a maximum security prison, then made a plea deal that included no more time that was accepted by the prosecution. Then the judge reneged to make an example out of him. He DID do time. If it was me, and it wouldn't be 'cause I would never do such a thing so we can dispense with any insults, I'd be thinking 'fuck you, jack' and get out of there, too.
Plus, the victim forgives him and wants the entire thing left in the past and also thinks he was treated unfairly.
That is a very interesting question.Not to mention, Angelica Huston was there at the time. How come no one thinks she's a horrible person, or even an accessory to the crime?
We have been wondering for a long time, but no answer for now. Personally, I'm really curious about it!after 32 year should he be taken back to usa for his crime? after all he rape a 13 year! your take?
Is English your first language, or did you grow up elsewhere than Phoenix?
Editor' s note: The following column contains language that may be offensive to some readers.
The year 2003 may just be the year Hollywood pedophiles come out of the closet to launch their national offensive.
In March, MGM / United Artists and Francis Ford Coppola Jr. begin shooting a film starring the admired Liam Neeson as Alfred Kinsey – the single most sadistic scientific pedophile propagandist in history. Is it prophetic that the Kinsey film follows on the heels of mass media kudos for Roman Polanski's "sensitive" film "The Pianist"?
The film is clever by half with Polanski staking his Yankee rehabilitation on a Holocaust story. If you missed the publicity spin, Roman lived through the Holocaust. The film allegedly has no sex and our hero is aided by a Godly Christian.
That said, for the price of a ticket to "The Pianist," we are supposed to forget Polanski's notorious brutality and pedophilic crimes.
But lest we forget, let's take a quick turn down memory lane.
Though the article clearly has an agenda, I have heard all that stuff about Polanski's taste for "very young girls" before. I mean, one doesn't drug and rape a 13-year-old out of nowhere. That sort of mindset comes from somewhere, and doesn't just dissipate spontaneously. Ugh.
No wonder French Minister of Culture and Communication Frederic Mitterrand joined Hollywood in defending child rapist Roman Polanski:
French President Nicolas Sarkozy was under growing pressure last night after his culture minister insisted paying for sex with young male prostitutes was 'not a serious mistake'.
Frederic Mitterrand also astonishingly challenged the French public's morality by asking them: who among you has not done something like this at least once
http://www.moonbattery.com/archives/2009/10/french_culture.html
France's Culture Minister Frederic Mitterrand is facing intense pressure over a book he wrote that described paying for "young boys" in Thailand.
But his strong defence of Polanski has brought the book back into the public eye. Polanski faces deportation to the United States for having had sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977.
Mr Mitterrand said the US' behaviour, in seeking his extradition, was callous and "horrifying
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8296578.stm
Yes, he should have been extradited back three decades ago.
That said, the victim has said she doesn't want this all brought up again. She has got on with her life and maybe her wishes should be taken into account.
Yes, he should have been extradited back three decades ago.
That said, the victim has said she doesn't want this all brought up again. She has got on with her life and maybe her wishes should be taken into account.
And if she wanted him literally burned at the stake, would it still be acceptable to take her wishes into account?
The US justice system considers the victim's wishes to be utterly irrelevant, otherwise it would corrupt the supposed impartiality of the system and introduce an unacceptable level of arbitrary judgment. In California, where this crime took place, victims have next to no right to even access basic, pertinent information about criminal proceedings. It was only in the past year or two that an act was passed in california congress to allow the dissemination of information to the victim, and even then you have to fight for it with very limited chance of actually obtaining the information.
Further, a civil judgment, which the victim recieved against Polanski although it is unclear whether she was able to collect, are separate from criminal proceedings and have no bearing on the relevance of the criminal case.
For good or for ill, the wishes of Polanski's victim should be, and will be, ignored.
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