DOES THE PUNISHMENT FIT THE LOOK?
March 22, 2007
Michael Smerconish
NOT UNTIL I saw Rachel Holt
did I appreciate the depravity of Debra LaFave.
You remember LaFave. She's
the Florida teacher who at 23 bedded a 14-year-old student.
In 2004, the blond bombshell
was arrested at the home of a middle-school student, accused of having sex with
him at her apartment, in her car and in her classroom.
"The lucky SOB,"
many like me said at the time.
Her prosecution became an
international sensation fueled by a pin-up photo of her "riding" a
motorcycle and then her spilling the sordid details to Matt Lauer on "The
Today Show."
I had never thought of
LaFave as a hardened criminal. Instead, I was part of the barstool jury that
wondered where, exactly, was LaFave back in my heyday - which would have been
Holicong Junior High School, circa 1977.
C'mon. Any honest eighth- or
ninth-grader (not to mention sophomoric middle-aged man) would have to confess
to wishing that LaFave (or Mary Kay Letourneau) was his homeroom teacher.
But there was no similar
fantasy in Delaware last week, even though the basic facts were the same.
There, too, a teenage
student (13 years old) had sex with a teacher. In this case, it was a
sixth-grade science teacher who prosecutors said bedded the boy 28 times,
generating 28 counts of first-degree rape.
Among the more interesting
details: She let him drive her car and called him 278 times in the two months
before her arrest.
Rachel Holt had years of
experience as a teacher, a master's degree in education and no criminal record,
but was still given a stiff sentence. She faced up to 25 years, but got 10 for
sleeping with a student.
But don't look for her
anytime soon on the "Today Show," or on a poster suitable for a
teenager's bedroom. And that's because . . . she's no hottie.
To see her mug shot is to
recognize that she's just a middle-aged woman fallen on awfully hard times. Her
lawyer says she's not a sexual predator but rather a victim of low self-esteem
and depression who was herself abused by an ex.
The lawyer also said that in
40 similar cases around the country, the average sentence was 18 months to two
years.
I wonder if the way she
looks had some effect on her punishment - which is like some very ordinary
person, not like the stunning LaFave, who got just three years on house arrest
and seven years' probation.
It's the same thing we see
with missing women.
Natalie Holloway is
front-page stuff because she's pretty, white, blond and affluent.
But a minority woman in
similar circumstances would never get that attention. Ditto for Anna Nicole
Smith. She was blond - and there were two other reasons that she dominated the
news, period.
Maybe I'll be able to test
my theory when Carrie McCandless gets her day in court.
She's the 29-year-old
Colorado social-studies teacher who was also married to the principal and was
charged last year with sleeping with a 17-year-old during a school camping
trip. She's facing up to 20 years. Like LaFave, she's easy on the eyes.
That probably means
probation.
At Holt's sentencing in
Delaware, the victim's uncle said of the boy that "he had his innocence
taken away through betrayal."
That is the sort of comment
that would have made me snicker about LaFave. (Take my innocence, please.) But
no more.
One look at Holt's mug shot
was a wake-up to exactly what these cases are about. Exploitation. Whether
she's a hottie or a heifer. *
Listen to Michael Smerconish
weekdays 5:30-9 a.m. on the Big Talker, 1210/AM. Read him Sundays in the Inquirer.
Contact him via the Web at www.mastalk.com.