Ex-Naval Academy QB Acquitted of Rape

BlackSheep

New Member
A military jury on Thursday acquitted a former Naval Academy quarterback of raping a female midshipman in her dormitory room.
But jurors convicted Lamar S. Owens Jr. on two lesser charges-conduct unbecoming an officer and disobeying a lawful order.

"They have determined, obviously, that the consensual act took place," said Cmdr. John Maksym, the trial judge. He added that the jury of five Naval officers found that Owens "wrongfully entered the room without permission and wrongfully engaged in consensual sex."

Owens, standing at attention as the verdicts were read, showed no emotion. He remains free without bond. He was not allowed to graduate or receive a commission in May, and remains a midshipman. Neither Owens' accuser nor her family were in court when the verdict was read.

The trial's punishment phase will begin Friday morning. Prosecutors recommended a sentence of two years on the charge of conduct unbecoming an officer. The judge tabled discussion of a sentence on the second count until Friday. Maksym also said he would consider whether to set aside either of the charges. During the trial, the judge chastised prosecutors for what he called "the anemic nature" of their witnesses.

He was especially critical of the qualifications of expert witnesses prosecutors called to rebut questions raised by Owens' attorneys about why the woman didn't cry out that night and didn't immediately notify authorities.
"Everyone's reaction is relief," said Reid Weingarten, Owens' civilian defense counsel. "There is no evidence that Lamar Owens raped this woman."

He was also optimistic that the other charges would eventually be set aside.
"We're very confident that conduct unbecoming will go," he said. "There was no evidence presented at trial to support that charge. ... The accuser offered no recollection of the events and Owens said that he was invited."

The conviction for failure to obey a lawful order stemmed from Owens' violation of a Naval protective order aimed at keeping him away from his accuser's room. Of that charge, Weingarten said: "Lamar Owens was in the wrong hall at the wrong time. Owens had no intention of harassing his accuser and had spoken to others about leaving her alone."

Owens, 22, of Savannah, Ga., was charged after an incident Jan. 29 in the woman's room at the academy's Bancroft Hall. Owens testified that the sexual encounter was consensual; his accuser said that she repeatedly rejected his advances. Both Owens and his accuser testified that they had several drinks at separate locations in Baltimore and Annapolis in the hours before their early morning encounter. Other witnesses said the young woman was seen having as many as nine drinks at a restaurant and later at an Annapolis bar favored by midshipmen.
 

BlackSheep

New Member
Reid Weingarten, one of Owens' four lawyers, gave a powerful and uninterrupted closing argument attacking the credibility of the woman and her inability to remember key elements of the night, as well as statements she made that he said were "obviously false."

Occasionally chuckling while characterizing the prosecution's case, he called its theory "preposterous."

"So Lamar Owens was just prowling around, looking for sleeping lasses and he comes upon the room of [the woman]," Weingarten said. "Great news, she's asleep!"

He said that behavior was "inconsistent" with Owens' character, and asserted that she consented to sex with him, regretted it and used the academy's history of not punishing alleged rape victims for conduct violations to avoid being punished for her untoward behavior.

Weingarten said Owens made the statements to try to get his accuser to "back off," wishing to avoid a confrontation.

He asked the jurors to focus on five factors: gaps in the woman's memory that made it impossible for her to remember whether she invited Owens to her room; apparent inconsistencies in her testimony and that of her friends; an allegation that the woman destroyed a computer instant message conversation she had with Owens just before the encounter; the unlikely theory that Owens was "prowling" in the halls, looking for someone to rape; and that the woman was sleeping and unconscious only for the 20 minutes during the encounter, but before and after was able to send instant messages on her computer.

He asked jurors to imagine they were "out at sea" and had an "important strategic decision to make" and had to make it based on the perceptions of one of two shipmates: One who was intoxicated, had a history of blackouts and "untruths," who had blacked out during a critical period; or someone like Owens.

"There is not one chance on God's green Earth that you would rely on the word of that first shipmate," he said. "This is a wonderful young man who exercised bad judgment for five minutes. ..
 

Lilypad

Well-Known Member
Hmmmmm

I still want to know that if he didn't rape her...why did he call her the next day and apologize? :shrug:
 

oldman

Lobster Land
I would like to know wny nothing has been said thus far about bringing charges against her. "If" he didn't rape her as she claimed then hasn't she made a false claim? I think both should be at least kicked out of the academy.
 

buddy999

It's Great to be American
BlackSheep said:
A military jury on Thursday acquitted a former Naval Academy quarterback of raping a female midshipman in her dormitory room.
But jurors convicted Lamar S. Owens Jr. on two lesser charges-conduct unbecoming an officer and disobeying a lawful order.

"They have determined, obviously, that the consensual act took place," said Cmdr. John Maksym, the trial judge. He added that the jury of five Naval officers found that Owens "wrongfully entered the room without permission and wrongfully engaged in consensual sex."

Owens, standing at attention as the verdicts were read, showed no emotion. He remains free without bond. He was not allowed to graduate or receive a commission in May, and remains a midshipman. Neither Owens' accuser nor her family were in court when the verdict was read.

The trial's punishment phase will begin Friday morning. Prosecutors recommended a sentence of two years on the charge of conduct unbecoming an officer. The judge tabled discussion of a sentence on the second count until Friday. Maksym also said he would consider whether to set aside either of the charges. During the trial, the judge chastised prosecutors for what he called "the anemic nature" of their witnesses.

He was especially critical of the qualifications of expert witnesses prosecutors called to rebut questions raised by Owens' attorneys about why the woman didn't cry out that night and didn't immediately notify authorities.
"Everyone's reaction is relief," said Reid Weingarten, Owens' civilian defense counsel. "There is no evidence that Lamar Owens raped this woman."

He was also optimistic that the other charges would eventually be set aside.
"We're very confident that conduct unbecoming will go," he said. "There was no evidence presented at trial to support that charge. ... The accuser offered no recollection of the events and Owens said that he was invited."

The conviction for failure to obey a lawful order stemmed from Owens' violation of a Naval protective order aimed at keeping him away from his accuser's room. Of that charge, Weingarten said: "Lamar Owens was in the wrong hall at the wrong time. Owens had no intention of harassing his accuser and had spoken to others about leaving her alone."

Owens, 22, of Savannah, Ga., was charged after an incident Jan. 29 in the woman's room at the academy's Bancroft Hall. Owens testified that the sexual encounter was consensual; his accuser said that she repeatedly rejected his advances. Both Owens and his accuser testified that they had several drinks at separate locations in Baltimore and Annapolis in the hours before their early morning encounter. Other witnesses said the young woman was seen having as many as nine drinks at a restaurant and later at an Annapolis bar favored by midshipmen.

After reading the story it is my opinion that he was rightly aquitted of rape but that he should be held accountable for being in a female dorm in the first place.

It also seems to me that since the woman did not cry out, that the sex was consentual but that she had second thoughts about it later and decided, for whatever reason, to accuse him of rape.
 

Bustem' Down

Give Peas a Chance
Lilypad said:
I still want to know that if he didn't rape her...why did he call her the next day and apologize? :shrug:

Maybe he felt bad for just wanting a piece of azz? It's better than not calling.
 

morganj614

New Member
oldman said:
I would like to know wny nothing has been said thus far about bringing charges against her. "If" he didn't rape her as she claimed then hasn't she made a false claim? I think both should be at least kicked out of the academy.

She waited 5 days, after she invited him to her room, to accuse him of rape :rolleyes:
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
I believe - and someone correct me if I'm wrong - it's against the regs to have sex in the dorms, and Owens is being brought up for conduct unbecoming.

What pray tell, is the woman being charged with?

Is it possible she came up with the charge of rape to avoid possible expulsion?
 

OldHillcrestGuy

Well-Known Member
oldman said:
I would like to know wny nothing has been said thus far about bringing charges against her. "If" he didn't rape her as she claimed then hasn't she made a false claim? I think both should be at least kicked out of the academy.

Amen fellow Old Guy, Her behavior of being intoxicated on several occasions around town isnt that conduct unbecoming of a officer also? :whistle:
 

SouthernMdRocks

R.I.P. Bobo, We miss you!
OldHillcrestGuy said:
Amen fellow Old Guy, Her behavior of being intoxicated on several occasions around town isnt that conduct unbecoming of a officer also? :whistle:

I agree, if they are charging him, they should charge her as well.
 

Lilypad

Well-Known Member
I still think the moral is that men and women-especially young men and women who aspire to leadership positions-need to respect themselves enough not to engage in self-indulgent, destructive behavior. :whistle:
Frankly, I wouldn't want to serve with either one of them. :boo:
 

Club'nBabySeals

Where are my pants?
SamSpade said:
I believe - and someone correct me if I'm wrong - it's against the regs to have sex in the dorms, and Owens is being brought up for conduct unbecoming.


The men are not allowed in the women's areas, and the women are not allowed in the men's areas.

This rule, of course, has never stopped a Hood College girl from sneaking up into either.
 
B

Bruzilla

Guest
SouthernMdRocks said:
I agree, if they are charging him, they should charge her as well.

I asked a State's Attorney about filing charges for falsely reporting a rape on a young lady once, and I was told straight out that you will never see that happen. Filing those charges would open up a swarm attack from women's rights groups claiming that prosecuting such a case would make women afraid to file rape charges unless they were 100% sure they could get a conviction.

My view was that pressing charges in these cases would benefit women because there would be less abuse of the system, and fewer bogus cases, so a woman reporting a rape would be seen as being far more credible, but I wasn't the State's Attorney so the charges weren't filed.
 

Nickel

curiouser and curiouser
Bruzilla said:
I asked a State's Attorney about filing charges for falsely reporting a rape on a young lady once, and I was told straight out that you will never see that happen.
:confused: It happens all the time...are you speaking specifically of a certain county or state?
 

BlackSheep

New Member
Military Jury: No Punishment for Former Navy QB

A military jury recommended no punishment Friday for a former U.S. Naval Academy quarterback who was acquitted of raping a female midshipman but convicted on lesser charges of conduct unbecoming an officer and disobeying a lawful order.

Lamar S. Owens Jr.' mother burst into tears, and his father leaned over a dividing wall and hugged him as the jury's decision was read. Prosecutors had recommended a two-year sentence for the 22-year-old from Savannah, Ga., for conduct unbecoming.

Owens' status as a midshipman at the academy, where he had been prepared to graduate, was referred to academy superintendent Vice Admiral Rodney Rempt.

The five Naval Academy officers that served as the jury found Thursday that Owens had consensual sex with a junior midshipman in her room at the academy Jan. 29, but they found that Owens was not guilty of rape. His accuser had claimed Owens entered her room uninvited and raped her after she blacked out.

Both Owens and his accuser testified that they had several drinks at separate locations in the hours before their early morning encounter.

Owens testified that the sexual encounter was consensual, that the woman had asked him to come to her room and then tugged on his sweater to get him into bed. "The sex was very quick and there wasn't a lot of romance," he testified. His accuser testified that she repeatedly rejected his advances.

During his sentencing hearing, Owens told the court he hoped to remain in the service. "I still want to be a Naval officer," Owens told the officers at his court martial. "I deeply regret the unwanted attention that I brought to the Naval Academy."
 
B

Bruzilla

Guest
Nickel said:
:confused: It happens all the time...are you speaking specifically of a certain county or state?

Beautiful downtown St. Mary's County.
 
Top