Brock Turner

The woman sexually assaulted by Brock Turner, known only as Emily Doe, will publish her memoir with Viking Books in September 2019.
The school has been in the spotlight since the 2016 Brock Turner rape case.
His lawyer argued that Turner only wanted “outercourse” ― sexual contact while fully clothed ― not intercourse with the unconscious victim.
Brock Turner’s lawyer is trying to get his client’s assault conviction against an unconscious woman overturned.
Attorney Eric Multhaup argued in an appellate court on Tuesday that Turner never intended to rape his victim.
Judge Aaron Persky, who gave Brock Turner only six months in jail on three felony sexual assault charges, has been recalled and removed from his seat.
Persky will be removed from the bench four years before his term was set to end.
Turner served just three months of a six-month jail sentence.
His story appears under the definition of “rape."
The lenient sentence shows no "clear and convincing evidence of bias," a judicial panel said.