The victim then proceeded to take the case to civil court in February 2011, seeking monetary compensation from her alleged attackers. Defendants Knopf and Chadwick claimed that the sex was consensual. Six other men were also listed in the lawsuit when the trial began in late February, but subsequently settled with the
plaintiff or had the lawsuit against them dismissed. That defendant later settled, but according to the plaintiff's attorneys, a witness came forward placing Chadwick in the room during Jane Doe II's rape. Jane Doe II's case was excluded from the trial, as the court found that there was not enough evidence that Chadwick had planned the attacks. On April 7, 2011, the jury in the civil case found Knopf and Chadwick to be not liable for the allegations against them, so no damages were awarded. After Judge
Aaron Persky's
sentencing of Brock Turner in 2016, Persky was criticized by Jane Doe's attorneys for allowing suggestive photos of the unidentified victim, taken at a party a year after the
gang rape, into evidence and preventing other victims from testifying. Attorneys for "Jane Doe" said that the photographs were not the only evidence that Persky unfairly permitted. Four of the baseball players had invoked
Fifth Amendment rights not to self-incriminate during the discovery phase of the litigation. According to a lawyer for Doe, that was a critical juncture: It prevented the victim's legal team from obtaining evidence that could have helped them pursue their case. The original judge in the case ruled in 2010 that the defendants could refuse to testify, but that would also mean that they would be prohibited from subsequently testifying in the case. That ruling was, however, overturned by Persky after he took over the trial in 2011, a move that Doe's attorneys say undermined her case.
Persky was
recalled by voters on June 5, 2018, primarily due to his sentencing decision in the
People v. Turner rape case. ==References==