Buck Sexton
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that is a crime.
And they knew that she lied.
And then she went on and murdered somebody.
Stabbed him to death.
Now, you could say, okay, well, one thing doesn't... Actually, I think it would have been better off if she had had to face the music on trying to ruin people's lives.
I think it would be better for her to have to look in the mirror, maybe spend a year or two in prison for what she did instead of getting 15 to life, which is, I think, what she ended up getting for murder, for stabbing a guy to death.
It's happened to members of this administration.
You're walking, though, into, I mean, by the way, I agree with you, but you're walking into a level of nuance that a lot of people are going to immediately skip past, which is they're going to say, now no one's going to want to file a rape claim or whatever.
It's not if you can't prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the offender did it.
That's the standard.
It can be proven beyond any doubt, beyond a reasonable doubt,
that you lied about the entire thing.
Yes.
That's a very high standard.
But in the situation like the Rolling Stone case, another very well-known one,
Well, I mean, now that wasn't a that didn't go to a criminal case, but I'm saying a situation where someone just completely fabricates.
The actual, by statute, they should have been prosecuted.
By statute, the DA, but they decided not to because of all the stuff.
So it is illegal to do it.
They just decided not to bring the charge.