Sunday, 17 July 2016

Former football player sentenced to 15 years for rape

Cory Batey in court in April 15, 2016. Samuel M. Simpkins / AP Photo



A former football player convicted of rape and sexual battery from a June 2013 incident was sentenced to 15 years in prison on Friday.

He was a member of the Vanderbilt football club. The Vanderbilt Commodores football program represents Vanderbilt University in the sport of American football.

Cory Batey was convicted during a retrial on April 8, 2016, of sexually assaulting an unconscious 21-year-old woman in a Vanderbilt dormitory three years ago. The judge who sentenced him to 15 years in prison, but said the man’s true punishment for raping an unconscious woman three years ago was a life sentence.


In court on Friday ahead of Batey’s sentencing, the victim read a statement to the court, explaining the continued impact of her assault.

“In this age of technology, anyone I ever meet in my personal or professional life can learn I am a rape victim and the details of the case before I’ve even fully introduced myself to them,” she said, according to the Tennessean.
“The thought of sharing any more of myself that hasn’t already been taken from me seems unbearable, and it goes against every instinct that I have,” she added.
The victim, whose name has not been disclosed, described parts of her attack from June 2013 in her statement Friday.

“Mr. Batey continued to abuse and degrade me, urinating on my face while uttering horrific racial hate speech that suggested I deserved what he was doing to me because of the color of my skin,” she said. “He didn’t even know who I was.”

Multiple sources confirmed to The Tennessean the statement Batey made. “That’s for 400 years of slavery you b----,” Batey said.

Batey also addressed the court Friday, pleading with the judge to grant him the minimum sentence. In the three years since the trial began, he became a father and wanted to be near his son.

“I hope that if not today maybe one day you would find it in your heart to forgive me for any damages I may have caused,” Batey said, calling the rape an “unintentional tragedy.”

The judge overseeing the case, Monte Watkins, said it was the saddest one he’d encountered in 32 years, and said that everyone involved in the case, despite their court sentences, would be serving for the rest of their lives.

“All of the defendants in this case basically have life sentences,” he said, according to the Tennessean. “After they get out of jail or prison they will be on the sex-offender registry for the rest of their lives. That’s a life sentence in and of itself.”