Tannin wrote:You forgot:
7: Criminal prosecution of false claims.
8: A public register of former claimants to help employers, co-workers, and employees protect themselves against the risk of working with people likely to publish claims against them.* A statute of limitations should apply such that one no longer appears on the list after as suitable period, say 20 years.
The aim here is to provide a balance between the right of a victim of harassment to speak out (which is essential but has massive costs for the victim of the complaint, whether or not it is true), and the right of ordinary people not to be the victim of a public claim of sexual wrongdoing.
Right now we have an insane guilt by accusation system with near-zero cost to the false accuser and horrendous, life-changing costs to the victim. With every other sort of crime, guilt is determined by evidence, almost always given in public, and always weighed up and decided on by a court of law. There are all sorts of problems with the court system, as we all know, but it does at least try to be fair to all parties, or at very least it pretends to try. Our current system of trial by accusation does not even pretend to try to be fair.
* Think about it. Suppose you discover that the person you are working with has previously, in some other job, made accusations against co-workers. You need to know this so that you can institute appropriate risk management before it happens to you too.
This blokes life has been destroyed by nothing more than 'allegations'
Mr McLachlan, 53, claimed reports he engaged in sexual misconduct, harassment, bullying, and indecent assault towards three actresses during a 2014 production of the Rocky Horror Show (RHS) are untrue and have damaged his reputation and mental health.
The NSW Supreme Court heard on Friday that separate to the civil proceedings, detectives from Victoria Police are investigating complaints of indecent assault and assault against the actor from 2014.
No criminal charges have been laid against the actor
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-11-16/ ... e/10505130
Don't count the days, make the days count.