>From GettingIt ( http://www.gettingit.com )

[ S C O P E ]
JAILING RAOUL 
A Colorado boy's sex-crime nightmare 
BY KEN LAYNE 
[ 11.15.99 ] 

In Boulder, Colorado, it's fairly easy to rape and kill your 6-year-old 
beauty queen daughter without much hassle from the law, but down the 
road in Jefferson County -- home of Adolph Coors, the horrible Rocky 
Flats nuclear weapons site, and bland Littleton-esque suburbs for Denver 
commuters -- the cops deal swiftly with crime against kiddies.

Especially if the alleged criminal is an 11-year-old boy who maybe 
played doctor with his sister, like every other kid on Earth. Back in 
June, blond moppet Raoul W�thrich was accused by a meddling neighbor of 
inappropriately touching his 5-year-old sister -- and after his 
late-night arrest two months later, spent nearly eight weeks locked up 
like a murderer. He was forced to appear in court wearing leg irons and, 
due to his dual U.S.-Swiss nationality, his treatment inspired 
international outrage.

Once again, the civilized world looks to America and says, "You people 
are all fucking insane."

In the days before everything became a sex crime, the nosy neighbor 
would tell the kids' parents, and the parents would say to the children, 
"Stop doing that," and the kids would stop doing it whenever parents and 
neighbors were around. This is a time-honored system, with few 
variations. (In the hippie-parent version, the kids would get a long, 
groovy lecture on how precious and beautiful sex can be, but not until 
you're much older, and it's just a beautiful thing that happens between 
two people who are like, so in love with each other... The kids 
immediately lose all curiosity about sex and turn their attention to 
guns.)

But at 10:30 on the night of August 30, Jefferson County sheriff's 
deputies arrived at the W�thrich home in suburban Evergreen. They seized 
Raoul and arrested him without a warrant. The 4-foot-tall boy felt the 
handcuffs clamp onto his dangerous tiny wrists and was stuffed inside a 
police car and taken to the county's juvenile jail, where he was kept 
for seven weeks, through two preliminary hearings, and eventually dumped 
into foster care where he stayed until his formal day in court last 
week. If that wasn't torture enough, Raoul knew that if found guilty, he 
would be imprisoned for two years, during which time he would likely 
learn the true meaning of "sexual assault."

On September 8, the boy was denied bail because the prosecutors feared 
his family would take the only rational action and get on the very next 
plane to Switzerland. Indeed, the family did flee to Switzerland, 
because the cops started dropping hints -- as they always do in these 
situations -- that all sorts of dirty stuff was happening in the 
W�thrich home. Fearing the cops would arrest them or take their three 
other children, the W�thrich lawyers advised the family to get the hell 
out of Colorado. 

The local press drooled over the fact that Raoul's parents, Beverly and 
Andreas W�thrich, are first cousins. While this may be bad for the gene 
pool, it's not illegal in Colorado and many other states; nor is it a 
crime in Switzerland. But the real proof that these weird Europeans were 
all sex criminals came when The Denver Post reported that the parents 
had registered a company that would sell perfectly legal adult videos 
and -- the smoking gun -- they would maybe even start a Web site called 
Ultimate Fantasies in an attempt to make a little money off the huge 
Internet pornography market.

(Ultimate Fantasies is one of the most generic porn phrases on the Web, 
but interestingly enough, it wasn't registered as a domain until October 
23 -- after the Denver newspapers reported Beverly and Andreas W�thrich 
had started a company by that name. Cybersquatters strike again! Neither 
W�thrich has any sites registered with Network Solutions, although 21 
other W�thrich's have domains registered, none in the Denver region's 
303 area code.) 

As thousands of Swiss sent contributions for his legal defense, the 
W�thrich family maneuvered to free their son. Meanwhile, Raoul sat in 
his cell, accused of incest and sexual assault, even denied the 
counseling Jefferson County's prosecutors insisted he needed. 

This case alone has proven every European assumption about the United 
States: We are savage hypocrites, scared to death of sex, disgusted by 
nature, unable to fathom the sexual curiosity all primates are born 
with, delighted to put everybody in jail forever, and in love with cops 
bursting into homes with guns and handcuffs. We are addicted to Web porn 
and pay-per-view skin flicks, but will rally to destroy the family of 
anyone even considering actually working in the porn industry, like the 
mob of idiot villagers chasing Frankenstein's monster.

"Switzerland is Scandalized," screamed a headline in the Swiss newspaper 
Blick on October 21. A man-in-the-street poll by the paper got responses 
such as "It's brutal to keep an 11-year-old in jail," and, "Americans 
are prudes."

The outrage in Switzerland was so intense that its Federal Department of 
Justice and Police threatened to "intervene" with Colorado authorities 
if that's what it would take to get Raoul back to his family. The news 
was particularly shocking to the Swiss because there, kids under 14 
cannot be prosecuted, period.

"Americans would like to teach the world moral values, but look what 
kind of 'moral' president they have," the Swiss newspaper Le Matin said 
in an editorial on the case last week. Touch�. 

And as trade ministers from around the globe met in Geneva last week to 
prepare for Seattle's World Trade Organization summit, the talk was of 
the United States' pathetic record of destroying kids by tossing them 
into prisons. The shameful treatment of Raoul also provoked a new 
European frenzy over U.S. refusal to sign the Convention on the Rights 
of the Child, a United Nations pact adopted a decade ago that's been 
ratified by 191 countries.

But in America, where more than 100,000 children are behind bars, kids 
are more likely to hear their Miranda rights.

The kid's nightmare finally ended on Wednesday, when Jefferson County 
District Judge James Zimmerman threw out the case because Raoul was 
denied a speedy trial. A Swiss diplomat has taken the boy home, which is 
now Switzerland only.

"[T]he world has witnessed how the United States violated a child's 
human rights," Amnesty International said in a damning statement 
Wednesday.

The W�thrich family will, of course, sue the cops and the prosecutors 
and the county, and if there's any justice they will win $100 million. 
Unfortunately, true justice -- having the children of these rabid cops 
and lawyers locked up for months and scarred for life -- isn't an 
accepted legal remedy.

Ken Layne still likes to play doctor. He recently retired from United 
Press International in Washington and can be found in the pages of 
Tabloid.net, the Online Journalism Review, the Daily Telegraph, the Los 
Angeles Daily News, Mother Jones, and other fine publications.

Send comments about this article to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Copyright 1999, GettingIt. All rights reserved.


Reply via email to