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AP Photo / Charles Krupa

Ex-student at elite school cleared of rape, guilty of lesser sex crimes

A jury took eight hours to reach its verdict in the case against 19-year-old Owen Labrie, who attended St. Paul’s School

A jury cleared Owen Labrie, a graduate of an exclusive New England prep school, of felony rape but convicted him on charges of lesser sex offenses against a 15-year-old freshman girl, in a case that exposed a campus tradition in which seniors competed to see how many younger students they could have sex with.

The jury — nine men and three women — took eight hours Friday to reach its verdict in the case against Labrie, 19, of Tunbridge, Vermont, who was accused of forcing himself on the girl in a dark and noisy mechanical room at St. Paul's School in Concord two days before he graduated in 2014.

He wept after hearing the verdict, and his mother sobbed into a tissue. His accuser appeared stoic and huddled with members of her family in the courtroom.

Labrie, who was bound for Harvard and planned to take divinity classes before his arrest put everything on hold, faces a sentence of as much as 11 years in prison. He will also have to register as a sex offender.

He was acquitted of the most serious charges against him — three counts of felony rape, each punishable by 10 to 20 years in prison. But he was found guilty of three counts of misdemeanor sexual assault, using a computer to lure a minor for sex and child endangerment.

The jury cleared Labrie of aggravated felonious sexual assault but found him guilty of statutory rape because the girl was 15 at the time and could not legally consent to intercourse.

"Today a measure of justice has been served for victims of sexual violence," the girl's family said in a statement. The family said the conviction forces Labrie to "take ownership for his actions and gives him the opportunity to reflect upon the harm he has caused."

But the family added, "We still feel betrayed that St. Paul's School allowed and fostered a toxic culture that left our daughter and other students at risk to sexual violence. We trusted the school to protect her and it failed us."

The scandal cast a harsh light on the 159-year-old boarding school, which has long been a training ground for politicians, Nobel laureates, corporate executives and other members of the country's elite.

Prosecutors said the rape was part of Senior Salute, which Labrie described to detectives as a competition in which graduating seniors tried to have sex with underclassmen and kept score on a wall behind a set of washing machines.

Labrie, an aspiring minister, testified that he and the girl made out, but he said he stopped short of intercourse because he suddenly decided "it wouldn't have been a good choice for me." A detective quoted him as saying he had a moment of "divine inspiration" as he was about to put on a condom.

In his testimony, Labrie acknowledged bragging to friends that he had intercourse with the girl, but he said that was a lie told to impress them. He also admitted deleting 119 Facebook messages, including one in which he boasted that he "pulled every trick in the book" to have sex with her.

In graphic and sometimes tearful testimony, the girl, now 16, said she willingly went with Labrie to the rooftop of an academic building after he invited her to take part in Senior Salute, a tradition she said she knew about. But she said she was prepared for kissing at most.

She said he soon become aggressive and she told him, "No, no, no" as he moved his face toward her crotch. She said he eventually penetrated her, and she felt "frozen" — incapable of moving or reacting.

"I tried to block out the feeling as much as I could," she said. "I didn't want to believe this was happening to me."

Under cross-examination, she said she helped Labrie remove her shirt and pants. When questioned about breezy email and Facebook exchanges that she had with him in the hours afterward, she explained that she kept the conversation light because she was trying to find out whether he had worn a condom.

Traces of sperm were found on the girl's underwear but could not be conclusively linked to Labrie.

Alumni of St. Paul's include Secretary of State John Kerry, who graduated in 1962 alongside former FBI Director Robert Mueller. "Doonesbury" creator Garry Trudeau also attended the school, as did at least 13 U.S. ambassadors, three Pulitzer Prize winners, actor Judd Nelson and sons of the Astor and Kennedy families. Students pay $53,810 a year in tuition, room and board.

After Labrie's arrest, school officials said they would expel anyone participating "in any game, 'tradition' or practice of sexual solicitation or sexual conquest under any name" and throw out those possessing keys or access cards they aren't entitled to. Labrie was said to have used a key that was shared among seniors to get to restricted areas.

The school, which first admitted girls in 1971 and has about 530 students, also brought in experts to discuss topics including substance abuse, harassment and building healthy relationships.

Labrie was captain of the soccer team and said he attended the school on full scholarship. Defense attorney J.W. Carney told the jury that St. Paul's treated Labrie "shabbily" by taking away an award he received for character and devotion to the school and not adding his name to the wall of all graduates.

The Associated Press

 

 

 

 

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