STEUBENVILLE, Ohio (AP) -- A teenage girl who says she was
raped by two Ohio high school football players testified Saturday that
she could not recall what happened the night of the alleged attack.
The
16-year-old West Virginia girl took the stand on the fourth day of the
nonjury trial of 17-year-old Trent Mays and 16-year-old Ma'lik Richmond.
She
said she remembers drinking at a party last August, leaving the party
then throwing up later. The next thing she remembers is waking up naked
in a strange house, she said.
She said she
realized she was assaulted when she later read text messages among
friends and saw a photo of herself and a video made that night.
Mays
and Richmond are charged with digitally penetrating the accuser, first
in a car and then in the basement of a house, while out partying Aug.
12. Mays also is charged with illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented
material. The two maintain their innocence.
The
case has riveted the small city of Steubenville amid allegations that
more students should have been charged and led to questions about the
influence of the local football team, a source of pride in a community
that suffered massive job losses with the collapse of the steel
industry.
Earlier Saturday, defense attorneys
went after the character and credibility of the alleged victim, calling
witnesses to the stand to accommodate their schedule, although the
prosecution had not yet rested.
Two former
friends of the girl testified for the defense that the accuser had a
history of drinking heavily and was known to lie about things.
On
the stand, West Virginia high school student Kelsey Weaver said the
accuser told her what happened two days after the alleged attack then,
sometime afterward, told Weaver she couldn't remember what happened.
"So two different versions?" asked Mays' attorney Adam Nemann.
"Yes," Weaver replied.
Earlier, Weaver testified that the accuser was flirting at the party with Richmond.
Both
Weaver and schoolmate Gianna Anile testified they were angry at the
accuser because she was drinking heavily at the party and because of her
behavior, which they said included rolling around on the floor. They
said they tried unsuccessfully to get her to stop drinking.
Anile said she also tried to get her friend to stay at the party rather than leave with others, including the two defendants.
"When
I told her not to leave, I was trying to, like, pull her back into the
party. She was trying to shrug me off," Anile testified. "She kind of
hit me."
Anile, whose lawyer was present during her testimony, appeared, like all of the trial's teen witnesses, reluctant to be there.
The
day after the party, when Anile and another friend picked up the
accuser from the house where she'd stayed, the accuser said she had no
memory of the night before, Anile testified under questioning by defense
attorney Walter Madison.
"'We didn't have sex, I swear,'" Anile said, describing the accuser's comment.
Anile said she'd seen the girl drink heavily in the past and that she no longer speaks to her.
The
case has featured disturbing testimony from teens, both in person and
in graphic text messages, and has shined an unwelcome light on what
students in the community once considered private conversations. Some
teenage witnesses winced at times as they were forced to read adult
language from texts.
Anile repeatedly said she
couldn't remember statements she made to police last September about
the night of the party. Midway through her testimony, special judge
Thomas Lipps agreed to let her listen to a 40-minute recording of her
statement to refresh her memory.
On Friday,
three teenage boys granted immunity for their testimony said the accuser
was drunk and didn't seem to know what was happening to her that night.
Mark
Cole, Evan Westlake and Anthony Craig spoke Friday of the West Virginia
girl's behavior the night of a party and described her being digitally
penetrated in a car and later on a basement floor.
Cole
testified that he took a video of Mays and the girl in the car, then
deleted it later that morning. He testified he saw Mays unsuccessfully
try to have the girl perform oral sex on him later in the basement of
Cole's house. Cole also testified that the girl was intoxicated and
slurring her words.
Westlake testified he saw
Richmond's encounter with the girl in the basement, as did Craig.
Westlake also confirmed that he filmed a 12-minute video, later passed
around widely online, in which another student joked about the attack.
Craig
testified that he saw Richmond's hand in the "crotch region" of the
girl, a less descriptive version than he gave last fall in another
hearing.
If convicted, Mays and Richmond could be held in a juvenile jail until they turn 21.
The
Associated Press normally doesn't identify minors charged in juvenile
court, but Mays and Richmond have been widely identified in news
coverage, and their names have been used in open court.
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