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Roast Busters scandal : ウィキペディア英語版
Roast Busters scandal

The Roast Busters scandal is an on-going scandal in New Zealand involving a group of young men based in Auckland who allegedly sought to intoxicate underage girls to gang rape them, and the police response (or perceived lack of response) to the complaints of alleged victims. Three members of the group, including those identified as Joseph Lavell Parker (son of Hollywood actor Anthony Ray Parker) and Beraiah Hales, are known and two are under investigation. The case has drawn reactions from the Prime Minister (John Key), the Police Commissioner (Peter Marshall), the Minister of Police (Anne Tolley), several prominent media personalities in New Zealand, and the New Zealand public.
==Investigation==

The story broke in November 2013. Police spokesmen claimed they had been aware of the group and had been monitoring their Facebook page for two years, but had not begun prosecution because no alleged victims had made formal statements or complaints. However, it was later reported that at least two alleged victims had gone to the police in 2011. One of the alleged victims made a formal complaint in 2011 when she was thirteen years old, and was quoted as saying the police "said that I didn't have enough evidence to show, because I went out in clothes that was pretty much asking for it. () I was asked a lot of questions about what I was wearing, and I went out in a skirt." She stated she was also asked to re-enact her sexual assault with dolls.
In that same month the media reported that several girls who alleged they were raped by the group made complaints to the police at least as early as 2011, despite initial claims that no such complaints had been filed: four girls had come forward in 2011 and 2012. The police continually stated there was insufficient evidence to prosecute, although they claimed they had warned members of the group to cease their activities. That same months one of the alleged victims made a second official complaint after claiming the police failed to act on her initial complaint two years before.
Police Commissioner Peter Marshall initially defended the police's treatment of the alleged victims and its handling of the case, but later acknowledged that the police misled the public on the details of the case and could have done a better job dealing with the investigation. Police Minister Anne Tolley has since asked the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) to review how the case was handled, citing concerns of police mishandling. On 11 December 2013, speaking at a parliamentary select committee in Wellington, Police Commissioner Peter Marshal admitted police failings over the handling of the case, acknowledging that the investigation and response "should have been sharper."
On 12 November 2013 the police appointed "a woman detective with significant experience in child sexual abuse cases to head the newly named Operation Clover", who was to lead a multi-agency probe into the case. The investigating team has asked possible victims and others who may have information into the group to come forward by calling a dedicated phone-line.
The mother of an alleged victim stated that the school which the young men and some of the alleged victims attended did nothing in response to complaints. In a statement to the press the principal claimed "she was aware of an incident at an out-of-school party which she was told about it in April 2012", and that the school at the time cooperated with police, but the alleged victim claimed she was bullied by one of the young men on school grounds.
Some friends of the group have since claimed the boasts are exaggerated and the group did not specifically target under-age girls. Friends of the group also claimed the behaviour of the young men was nothing more than normal teen antics. Despite official police complaints having been laid as early as 2011, several friends of the group have claimed that other girls did indeed give consent: in New Zealand it is an offence to have sexual contact with a person under the age of 16,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1961/0043/latest/DLM329212.html )〕 and one alleged victim was 13 years old when she made an official complaint in December 2011.
The IPCA reported in March 2015 that the police investigation had serious problems and basic police work on the matter was inadequate. The police decided that prosecutions would be inappropriate but the IPCA said the legal threshold for prosecution had been met, for example on charges of sexual activity with a person under the age of consent. Police officials admitted that the police work was of unacceptable standard and apologised to the women involved and their families.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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