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Social media under fire in Ohio rape case

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“It may not be factual at all,” Heck said. “It certainly could have an impact on what the sentiment in the community is.”

Jefferson County Prosecuting Attorney Jane Hanlin brought sexual assault charges in August against two Steubenville High School football players, Trent Mays and Ma’lik Richmond, both 16. The Ohio Attorney General’s Office took over the investigation at the request of Hanlin, whose son, Charlie Keenan, attends Steubenville High School. He has been targeted in a Facebook page urging Kent State University “to revoke Charlie Keenan ‘Rape Crew’ member’s scholarship.”

An anonymous blog makes sweeping, unsubstantiated accusations against many Steubenville residents and students, targeting everyone from the prosecutor to the sheriff to the head football coach. The blog describes Steubenville as a “town rife with corruption, cronyism, illegal gambling and fixated upon their star high school football team.”

DeWine disputes the notion that team members are being protected because of their status as football players. “We have an outside judge, outside prosecutors, outside investigation,” DeWine said. “There’s no cover-up here. There are so many rumors going around Steubenville that I know are simply not true, but we can’t comment on every rumor. We need to present the case in court.”

Experts say that social media can be beneficial as well as harmful in criminal cases, noting that the Steubenville crime might never have come to light if it weren’t for social media.

Social media and technology also have helped investigators in recent high-profile cases in the Dayton area. Just 18 months ago, a Facebook post defused a burgeoning controversy over the death of 21-year-old Kylen English, who died after falling from the Salem Avenue Bridge.

In that case, English’s relatives questioned the Dayton police account that English broke a rear door window of the cruiser and jumped off the bridge, falling 30 feet. But a witness, Michael Tolliver, used his cellphone to write a post, clearly time-stamped, on Facebook: “SWARE to god somebody just busted out this “COP CAR WINDOW, JUMPED OUT THE BACK OFHIS CAR ON SALEM, WIT CUFFS ON, AND JUMPED OVER THE BRIDGE. … I CAN’T BELIEVE I JUST SAW THAT!”

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