Tia Jonsson {250x400}
curta se você usar e não retire os créditos! like if you use and don’t remove the credits!
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Tia Jonsson {250x400}
curta se você usar e não retire os créditos! like if you use and don’t remove the credits!
alternative link!
ulrika //
The sexual assault survivor also tells "60 Minutes" why she thinks the legal system picks apart victims like her, rather than finding the truth
For years, the world knew her only as "Emily Doe," the young woman who had been sexually assaulted as she lay unconscious behind a dumpster on Stanford's campus. The assailant, freshman athlete Brock Turner, was convicted of three felony sex crimes but drew national outrage for serving only three months in jail.
Now, with the release of a new book, "Know My Name," and an interview with "60 Minutes," Chanel Miller is reclaiming her story—and her identity. In unaired clips from her interview with "60 Minutes" correspondent Bill Whitaker, Miller talked about her attempts to separate herself from "Emily Doe," and why she thinks that when it comes to cases of sexual assault, the judicial system is not equipped to find the truth.
Filming the "60 Minutes" report also gave Miller an opportunity she had been waiting for: More than four years after that fateful January night, she finally met Peter Jonsson and Carl Arndt, the Swedish graduate students who stopped Turner's assault and held him down until police arrived.
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Martin Jonsson, 2017. Alors que le sujet est traité de façon surréaliste, le tableau dégage une certaine normalité et sérénité.
To the castle!! (By TimJonsson)