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tv   The Whistleblowers  RT  June 14, 2024 11:30pm-12:01am EDT

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a decade john curiosity, welcome to the west of lower the . 2 2 2 2 2 2 early in the morning of october, 15th 1983 research, a real good was a sleep in her dorm room at central michigan university. when she was awakened by a man in the room. the man had a knife. he told her that he wouldn't hurt her as long as she did when he told her to do. it forced himself on her twice. and when she wouldn't cooperate with him, he cut her legs with a knife. during the attack, she banged on the wall and screamed for help. she even tried to couches eyes out to try to stop him. after the attack, the man told lisa to go to sleep, even stood outside her door waiting for her to fall asleep. and every few minutes, he would peek into the room to see if she was still awake. she felt like a hostage. when he finally left, lisa locked in the door and called her boyfriend. he and a friend rushed her to
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a hospital. in the 35 years since that attack, lisa has dedicated her life to helping the victims of violent crime, strengthening legislation to protect victims and to punish perpetrators and to help victims re gain their mental health. after graduating from central michigan university, lisa as a real good attendant bowling green university where she earned to master's degrees, one in counseling and another in higher education administration. lisa is an author speaker and license counselor, and she joins us today. lisa, thank you so much for being with us. thank you for having me. wow, lisa, where do we even begin with a story? first? i wanna say how brave you are and how brave you have been. it's an unusual person who takes a trauma and uses that awful experience to help others. tell us about that. you were attacked in 1983, but you've finished school and you went on to to master's degrees. when was it that
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you decided to go into activism? was it a progression, or did you jump in with both feet? i did jump in with both feet, but it, it wasn't right away when that prime occurred. i was actually studying music. i was had always planned to study music. and after i experienced that crime, i changed my major to political science because i was going to be an attorney so that i could put bad guys behind bars. and i actually, as i was starting law school, got a job with a big law firm in toledo, ohio. and when i noticed was, you know, nobody was going to jail for their crimes, especially when it comes to sexual assault. only 2.5 percent of rate this go to jail. and yet a 100 percent of the victim survivor serve a life sentence. and so it was at that time that i just thought it was going to go into counseling and work with victims. so that that's what i did right away,
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but i didn't talk about my own story. and so my cold case opened 35 years later, i didn't talk about it. i wasn't active. so i just kind of put it away in the back of my mind. a didn't want to think about it, but when i called case reopened, that's when i jumped in with both feet. that's when i really realized that there's just so many reasons that perpetrators don't go to jail. and i started researching and researching. and what happened was on the 35th anniversary of the crime, i decided i wasn't going to sit home and mope. i wanted to start making a difference. so i started calling legislators, attorneys. it was, it's interesting because some people were calling me to i started hearing from some of the key players in the larry nasser case. and every one of them encouraged me to
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continue with what i was doing every one of them. so i didn't need to write a book and something i never plan to do. so. and so on that day it's interesting because as i was making the calls, one of the legislators i called their office said he's actually in your hometown, he's going to do a debate tonight and this was representative. he was my representative representative bill sizing up. so i went to the debate and the very 1st question and that debate was about sexual violence, which is really unusual for political to the debate. so i started writing a little letter to him, and as i was walking out, i thought if i can catch a moment, i'll give him a my letter. he actually stopped me. he thought that he knew me and said, you know, so good to see you. and so i was able to give him this letter. and the next morning he called me and said he was willing to work with me and invited me to washington dc. and so that's when i started just knocking on doors and legislators offices is
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fantastic. i think we can divide your work frankly into 3 categories. maybe even more than 3. you're a counselor and therapist, you're a lobbyist for important legislation. you're an author and speaker, walk us through this. how does it all come together? it's kind of a hodgepodge of things. you know, it's funny because my family always tease me because i have, i have had been educated in music, political science, counseling, college student personnel and, and they would say, you know, i'm just going to get a whole bunch of degrees. you can't, what do you to do with all those degrees of it? i'm using every one of them now. i think i went by the time the cool cases reopen, i was pretty uniquely equipped to address some things i was legal and ethical specialist was very comfortable working legislators. i had better trauma therapist for almost 30 years, so i have that expertise. and so it just,
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it worked out that the writing is something i like, i love to speak. i'm a good talker, john. so so speaking seemed pretty natural. yeah . and so as these key players in the nasa case, some people from the michigan attorney general's office and legislator started encouraging. i just became more and more passionate about the whole topic of sexual violence. so i started, i started speaking 1st to a lot to face face groups. and then that kind of took off and i, i started to note speaking on college campuses were such a self awareness month. and i started writing my story and it was kind of all roles on from there. we saw i have one more question about your case back in 2018. you got a call from the police who told you that they had re open your case and that they actually had a suspect. it turned out that
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a man at central michigan reported years after the fact that a former friend of his had confessed to the crime against you. is that how you were able to confront your attacker or not at 1st, john. uh, when that person stepped forward and reported that he said, perpetrator were a ski mask, so i never saw his face. couldn't identify him. but when this person came forward and, and reported the confession, my call case was reopened for about 3 months. and what happened during that time is kinda crazy. so in michigan there is no statute of limitations on a law or on a crime that, that, that is, that violence now, but there was a statute of limitations of 1983. and that's when the crime happened. so they have to use that old law. and because of that, he couldn't be arrested. he, um, he's a free man. he's a wealthy businessman with
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a clean record, even though he's been caught to other times in sex related crimes that have been expunged from his record. and so what happened was i, they closed the case and i received a call from the michigan attorney general's office, a special agent call to tell me that they felt there were significant safety issues for me. they the sky is a person of interest and to write palm sites now, and he didn't know my name, the perpetrator, but he knew that he had been identified in my case and that i to be a witness. in those other cases, if he could be connected to those crimes. so what they were saying is, you know, he could be looking for you. so they also told me that the, the laws as they stand now protect him as an innocent person. but they didn't protect me. so even if i were to go public with his name to expose
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in to confront him, he could send me a. so it was really a strange time at 1st because i i couldn't, couldn't find them. i didn't want them know who i was, so i did want them to know where i lives. so we had to just not make any contact with them at that time. my god, i didn't know that. we say you've been working with 2 great emmy winning journalist on a hard hitting documentary about your experience. it's not out yet, but as part of the documentary you were able to confront your attacker, what was that like? did you feel any closure or did it make you angry? first thoughts on i want to thank you because you introduce me to those emmy award winning the team. so brian ross and rhonda schwartz from the launch crime network took interest in my story and we've been building for about 3 years this
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documentary that will come out later this year. or. and as part of that, just over a year ago on the line crime network graciously took the deposition that they would go ahead and expose them. they would take that legal risk which was great. i didn't have to give them his name. i did, i am not exposing this man, i'm not putting myself out there making my cellphone or go to the sued. so what they did is they surveilled him for about 3 months to figure out what his patterns, where, where he was and they, they figured out that he went to the gym 3 hours a day. and so bryan ross and a team met me in this man's home town and we went, it was kind of crazy. we was out in the dark, suburban and i kind of waited for him to come out of the gym. there were people inside that were monitoring him and there were people outside and we had no
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security there. and it was, it was really crazy. but when he walked out of the gym, i just got out of the car and looked up and confronted him. it was almost surreal to you know, i had never seen his face. it was scary and i wasn't sure how i would what day i would react. brian ross kept asking you, what are you going to say to him? and i was, i don't have any idea what do you say to a person you've never met or seen? who's done something like this to you. but in a moment i was, i was surprised because i walked up to him and i felt so confident in finding him. i just walked up and said he, you remember me and he said, i'm trying to think could and it was. and then he saw the cameras and then he saw the, the sound crew and he knew,
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he knew who i was. and he, his face, there was hair on his face. and in that moment it was like i felt this transfer powers where i felt very confident and he looked very terrified, which is just the opposite is what it had been for 35 years. so i think that's the greatest thing that came out of it was getting my confidence that i felt like i had taken that power back for myself or incredible. lisa stay right there. we're speaking with authors speaker and counselor, at least as a ruba about sexual assault and other violent crimes. we're going to take a short break and when we come back, we're going to go into a little more detail about lease as case and we'll talk about the future of prosecuting these very difficult cases. they do the. 2 2 2 the russian
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states never as one of the most sense community best most i'll send, send up the speed . the one else calls question about this. even though we will then in the european union, the kremlin media mission, the state on rochester day and split the ortiz full neck, even our video agency, roughly all the band on youtube. the question, did you say from stephen twist, which is the
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of wanting to come here since i was 121. my grandfather told me that his mom came from russia that we were i was part russian. i didn't plan on staying this long. i was gonna look around, i was gonna see if it was for me, but then i came and then i was like, i don't remember when i go home. i've never been happier in life than i am here in most of the i've only lived here a few months, but i wanted to tell you what fascinates me about russia and share the stories of other foreigners who lived here like jay who worked as a chef and now raises goats and makes cheese in the countryside series, like chad who has been granted political asylum because he's being persecuted by the f. b. i. us, embassies. and for countries that come after me it's, it's wild like an american family that recently moved to russia with 6 children. i've never felt safe or land tire life then living here the
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welcome back to the rest of the letters. i'm john kerry onto we're speaking with lisa as a ruba who's a licensed professional counselor, specializing in trauma therapy. she's an author speaker and legislative advocate. good to have you with us lisa. thank you for having me. we. so i'd like to get into some broader issues now. you and i get together every time you come to washington and you're involved in some very important work. you meet regularly with members of congress and with senior staff members. i can tell you from my own experience on capitol hill, but it is very unusual for somebody to meet personally with the member. but you do you have that access? tell us what kind of legislation you're working on. what's the end result going to be the federal level start there in washington dc. first of all, all kinds related to sexual violence. sexual assaults are all handle the state
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level in the united states, not at the federal level. so some people were questioning, why would you go to washington dc? well, there are some things at the federal level that are really tied the hands of the states to be able to make arrests in these cases. so one of the things that we're looking at is there's a case called dr versus california, that the supreme court decided when the supreme court make that decision to be became precedents. and so all of the states have to abide by this decision. and the decision was based on the ex post facto clause in our constitution, that the, the supreme court determines that you can't remove the statute of limitations from a crime retroactively. and the reason for that is the expos fact of clause when it was put into the constitution, said that it's manifestly unjust, an oppressive to arrest somebody for something that wasn't illegal when they did it
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. that makes sense. it also says that if it, you know, you can't change the level of crime, it is. so let's say it was a misdemeanor, be when it was done, and now it's a felony. that would be fun just if they you can't increase the punishment or change the legal rules of evidence. but in my case, the rate was illegal, it was a felony. the punishment was the same. now, as it is the same, that as it is now, it's like in prison, wraps 25 years in prison. and so what i was as trying to illustrate as a majority, evicted survivors have no pathway to justice. and i think that's manifestly unjust, an oppressive. and so that's kind of the, the approach that we're taking, and i've done a lot of research into it ways that it can be overturned by congress through an act
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of through attached to tional management. there's several ways that it could happen . so i did try to get my own state to challenge stock nearby, creating a law that would be unconstitutional, and hope that it would be appealed due to the supreme court. but that takes a long time and a whole lot of money. and we had a legislator in michigan that didn't want to see that happen. and so it just, it didn't go through the lack of justice to john. it's not just in america there. there's a lack of justice in this area. globally, in the united states, we often hear our media, people talking about, you know, the, the lack of human rights in other countries. and they often refer to sexual assault
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as an attack on human rights in other countries. but what i think a lot of americans don't realize is that there's almost 200 nations recognized nations in our, in our world. and when you look at the level of sexual assault, the number of sexual assaults that occurred a year, the united states has force on that list. so there's, that's lot of south africa. and let's, let's see, 2 of those are the top 3 and then the united states of america. so we have a human rights issue right here on our own soil. and we have laws that are preventing us from ending that. so saunders is one of the things, and then also we've been looking into making sexual assaults, a federal crime. it's a state crime right now, and it's pretty complicated to explain it, but there, there is an article by donald a drips. he did research and pulled presented in the william and mary law review
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why rate couldn't be a national crime to the limits of commerce. and so there's a, there's a lot of and you endo and a lot of details that go along with that. but it's research and have also presented one of the stories that i tell when i talk to legislators is consider this. a man who serve time for a prior felony steals a car by threatening the owner. was it unloaded, done. he stops with a gas station, steals castro. mcclare well flashing the same, unloaded gun. he forces a woman into that car and drives to the next county where he rates are now a convicted felon in possession of a gun. that's a federal offense because of the gun control at the federal carjacking statute makes stealing the car a federal offense under the hogs act. robbery is a felony,
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a federal offense. the lynbrook act makes kidnapping a federal that offense using f. b. i hire violent crimes. the most violent crime, this person committed was the rate and it's the only crime committed that's not a federal offense. so that's another area that we're looking at at the national level. wow. wow. tell us what's happening then at the state level. you've had success at the federal level, but are the states doing enough to prevent sexual assaults or to punish the perpetrators when those crimes take place you know, to be seen? or i think the state's hands are tied by some federal decisions. so again, you know, trying to pass with legislation so to make the removal of the statute of limitations retroactive. you know, i go to the state level and there's always somebody in that chain of command who says that's unconstitutional. so we can't make that law. and the, the fact is we,
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we need to make an unconstitutional law, harder to challenge it. so um, so i did have an active but i wrote a bill for the michigan house of michigan house of representatives and it was active for 3 years. but again, the chair of the committee that it went to refuse to schedule a hearing because it was unconstitutional. so it, there's just this little blocks every step of the way. um i really think that our best bet now moving forward is i am going to propose that we pass the last similar to the new york adult survivors that and if you're not familiar with that last last year was the year that took place and the new york decided to give anybody who had experience sexual violence to i couldn't get justice because of statutes of limitations. specifically they could for one year,
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they opened a one year time frame that people could sue in civil courts. the perfect chair, it does not allow for arrest or any criminal action, but it does give victims some kind of bone so they can at least say civilly and kind of the other day for so that's what we're looking at now. basically, i see this is a of the state and federal governments have laws that are just so tangled up like spaghetti. and i feel like we just need to unravel that and that. and again, my case really does demonstrate the not. so if you think about it, my cold case was solved 35 years later. the statute of limitations when the crime occurred was only 8 years, i think central 35 years later, you know,
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basically my perpetrator won the game. he had his identity long enough that it couldn't be arrest, right? so although there's no statute of limitations. now in michigan, there was an $83.00. and when the statute limitations was removed they couldn't be retroactive because of the federal decision of the supreme court. sat there versus california, and then even though the crime punishment level of felony, everything didn't change. so he still couldn't be arrested. so as a result, they perpetrator, he couldn't be arrested or indicted at the state level. but because he knew that i had he had been done, if i didn't my case, of course, they said there are safety issues. and so when i was notified them that i was also notified that i could have no help with those safety issues because the federal government is who offers victim protection. but the federal government only offers
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protection if there's a conviction and the state can't convict. if they can't indict, so it's it's catch 22 is just this never ending cycle. there's too many ways for perfect carriers to beat the system. how can people learn more about the work that you're doing and about the documentary and work in a read what you're writing? thank you for asking that question. my website is lisa through godaddy. com and i will be keeping people updated and notified about legislation writing. all of that i, my 1st book is coming out february 11th. it's called the trauma tree going beyond trauma . scrolling toward fullness, it comes out, february 11th, 2025. and it's really just written from my perspective of expertise as a trauma therapist, but also my experience as a thomas survivor, it has bits and pieces with my story in it, but that book is gonna come out at
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a later date. so, so that's the next thing to come out. the documentary should be hearing by the end of this year 2024. we don't know what platform yet. the, the line crime network is producing and editing and putting together the documentary. but it is possible that it will sell to another network. so we, we don't know exactly the platform, but if you keep, keep posted up my website and um, social media, all of that will be available. and then speaking, i do speak nationwide if somebody's interested in, in uh, having me speak, you can schedule that right to my website. also. we just read this. thank you so much for being with us. former president ronald reagan once said quote, for too long the victims of crime has been forgotten. persons of our criminal justice system. rarely do we give victims to help they need or the attention they deserve. yet the protection of our citizens to guard them from becoming victims,
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is the primary purpose of our penalize and quote, that should be a given, but it's not. real change is made by individuals. real change is made by people like lisa through that. thanks for joining us for another episode of the whistle blowers. i'm john kerry onto please follow me on sub stack at john kerry onto we'll see you next time the. 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 the after the end of world war 2, great britain decided to make up for his losses with the merciless exploitation of
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its colonies. the plundering of the occupied territories. 8, le, devastated as a result of decades long fighting, extremely hard. changing, grew, and in 1948, the colonial administration was forced to declare a state of emergency in response patriots, united because of the malay in people's liberation army. and began a guerrilla war, london decided to suppress resistance, georgia and mass, the port agents executions of civilians and spraying of chemicals, scale being and cutting off at these where the barbaric methods, the british used trying to keep my la within their empire. the massacre in the village of baton gully, committed by the scots guards against the unarmed specialist because that particular stir, the entire male population became victims. trying to suppress the gorilla movement, the occupiers relocated 500000 people to concentration camps. for roses rule the
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board screwed. the patriots were scattered. however, the british experienced the strength of the malay resistance to the full extent. the british army losses in malaya were the largest since the end of world war 2. in 1957, the british empire was forced to recognize malay and independence. the resilience of them a late people put an end to the history of british colonialism in southeast asia. the, the, the,
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the i wanted to come here since i was 121 my grandfather and told me his mom came from russia. i was part russian. i didn't plan on staying this long. i was gonna look around. i was gonna see if it was for me that like it maybe i'll look at some properties come back in a few more years after i'm retired and then just finish out life in russia. but then i came and then i was like, i remember when i go home, that's how i felt about rush. i love it. i love it so much here that i don't even want to leave. i just want to travel around rush, i have no desire to go to any other country. the i've never been here in russia.

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