Couric & Co.
November 3, 2009 7:24 PM

Katie Couric's Notebook: Bystanders

The details of the gang rape that took place outside a high school homecoming dance at Richmond High School in California are horrifying. A girl was repeatedly attacked for two and a half hours. And as many as 20 people either took part or stood by and watched.

In California, it is illegal to witness a crime against a child and not report it-- but only if the victim is 14 or younger. In this case, she was 15.

So, the witnesses at Richmond High technically didn't break the law. But didn't anyone there just feel the slightest bit of compassion or mercy for the victim?

Some experts chalk it up to "the bystander effect." The people watching the crime may have felt powerless to stop it-- or perhaps they thought someone else would.

But in the age of the cell phone, how hard could it have been to call police?

Just one anonymous call, one person doing the right thing, could have stopped two and a half hours of brutality and spared a young woman a lifetime of emotional and physical scars.

That's a page from my notebook.

I'm Katie Couric, CBS News.

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bystander
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Katie Couric's Notebook
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by mjordy55 November 5, 2009 10:17 AM EST
I wonder why CBS TV almost never broadcasts news like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EISikrLcSw8&feature=topvideos
Where's The USA & the UN to stop this abuse of human rights!
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by mjordy55 November 4, 2009 8:13 PM EST
It is infuriating when most witnesses to a public crime do not intervene,or at least to call the police to inform about it. It reminds me of the Central Park rape,and the French female tourist whose boyfriend was restrained by a group of cheering onlookers while his wife(or girlfriend) was being raped one New Year's Eve. We're becoming a society of "peeping Toms" but is sick because like some sort of participating on the crime,Don't You think?
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by LeighOats November 4, 2009 6:00 PM EST
Oops again. Here correcting my correction . . .

Dear Katie, you say: "So, the witnesses at Richmond High technically didn't break the law."

Um---that's only in the unlikely event that not one of them uttered a sound or made an action of encouragement (= incitement) to any of the more involved actors in the case. The tiniest sound or action of incitement from any of the so-called bystanders to any of those more involved actors would have transformed that "bystander" into a culpable actor in the crimes that were committed against the girl.

The truth about at least some of those sounds or actions of incitement will come out eventually. It's only a matter of time.
Reply to this comment
by LeighOats November 4, 2009 3:52 PM EST
Oops. Here correcting my exciting error of spelling . . .

Dear Katie, you say: "So, the witnesses at Richmond High technically didn't break the law."

Um---that's only in the unlikely event that not one of them uttered a sound or made an action of encouragement (= incitement) to any of the more involved actors in the case. The tiniest sound or action of incitement from any of the so-called bystanders to any of those more involved actors would have transformed that "bystander" into a culpable actor in the crimes that were committed against the girl.

The truth about at least some of those sounds or actions of enticement will come out eventually. It's only a matter of time.
Reply to this comment
by LeighOats November 4, 2009 6:34 AM EST
Dear Katie, you say: "So, the witnesses at Richmond High technically didn't break the law."

Um---that's only in the unlikely event that not one of them uttered a sound or made an action of encouragement (= encitement) to any of the more involved actors in the case. The tiniest sound or action of encitement from any of the so-called bystanders to any of those more involved actors would have transformed that "bystander" into a culpable actor in the crimes that were committed against the girl.

The truth about at least some of those sounds or actions of enticement will come out eventually. It's only a matter of time.
Reply to this comment
by barackoboma November 4, 2009 12:19 AM EST
When I heard this story, I cried. I cried for the girl who went for this horrible event, the parents and family of the girl who went through this event, and for all the "good" kids and "good" parents who want only the best for their children. As for the ANIMALS that did this, they should be locked up forever. Should we blame this on poverty? Skin Color? Ignorance? Lack of religion? Video Games? Movies? Teachers?..... What about the parents who spawned these animals? What about the people that associated with these 20 ANIMALS? Wasn't there some indication, some warning bell that they were capable of something horrific?
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by kenhamlett November 3, 2009 10:17 PM EST
Sadly their is little compassion and very little sense of responsibility in today's society. Due to many factors in the news and in their every day lives they don't have a chance to learn to be responsible for their fellow man. They learn to survive in the jungle. The United States has regressed to medieval levels of personal responsibility. Parent's rely on schools to teach but the schools don't teach. Churches are just social centers. Cops and judges are corrupt. The list bad examples is endless. This is how and what they learn.
Katie you want to live in the society I want to live in but we are a dying breed. All we find is hypocrisy in the place of personal character. We are only reminded of this when we hear of such horrible events and we wonder what went wrong.
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