The case garnered nationwide attention after it was prominently covered in
The New York Times, in part for the role of social media in its development. Several individuals publicized the event using Twitter, YouTube,
Instagram, and text messages. Video and photo evidence reveal that the girl was sexually assaulted over the course of several hours. The video and photo evidence showed her to be unconscious. Some members of the community
blamed the girl for the rape and blamed her for casting a negative light on the football team and town. Criticism has also been placed upon media outlets themselves, especially
CNN. During the course of the delinquent verdict on March17, 2013, CNN's
Poppy Harlow stated that it was "incredibly difficult, even for an outsider like me, to watch what happened as these two young men that had such promising futures, star football players, very good students, literally watched as they believed their lives fell apart ... when that sentence came down, [Ma'lik] collapsed in the arms of his attorney. ... He said to him, 'My life is over. No one is going to want me now.
Candy Crowley and Paul Callan were also criticized for their lack of focus on the victim and their sympathy for the rapists. In early broadcasts on March17, 2013, CNN,
Fox News and
MSNBC aired unedited footage that revealed the first name of the rape victim during one of the students' post-conviction statements after the guilty disposition was announced. This practice is against the
Associated Press guidelines for coverage. These media outlets redacted the name in subsequent broadcasts. Her first name also appeared temporarily in documents leaked by Anonymous. Congressman
Bill Johnson of
Ohio's 6th congressional district, which includes Steubenville, issued a statement on January 7, 2013. In the statement, Johnson said, "As the father of two daughters and grandfather of four granddaughters, had something like what is being alleged here have happened to one of my loved ones, I would be demanding justice to the fullest extent of the law". He stated he was in contact with State Attorney General
Mike DeWine about the incident, and was confident that the state and local authorities were competently handling the case. On March17, after the verdict he stated: "This has been a tragic ordeal. Lives have been forever changed because of the reprehensible acts committed by the young men involved. Now that they've been held accountable in court, I'm hopeful that the Steubenville community will begin the difficult process of healing".
Leaked evidence On December24, 2012, following national newspaper coverage, the hacker collective
Anonymous and other hackers threatened to reveal the names of other unindicted alleged participants. In December 2012, KnightSec, an offshoot of Anonymous, hacked an unaffiliated website, posting a demand for an apology by school officials and local authorities, who had allegedly covered up the incident in order to protect the athletes and school's program. KnightSec followed up their December hack on January1, 2013, posting a video featuring the "self-proclaimed 'rape crew' from the night of the attack, making jokes about what had happened". There are allegations that more people participated in the crime. One of the hackers was later indicted under the federal
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Deric Lostutter, who donned a
Guy Fawkes mask and was interviewed by
CNN, was later raided by the FBI with a warrant targeting his involvement in the hacking of a site, even though somebody else acknowledged being responsible for the hacking.
Saltsman v. Goddard Saltsman v. Goddard concerned an effort by the parents of Cody Saltsman, a teenage boy from Steubenville, to stop blogger Alexandria Goddard's website from publishing allegedly defamatory posts about their son. The parents sued Goddard and a dozen anonymous posters in October 2012; a legal blogger labeled it a
SLAPP suit. The lawsuit asked for an
injunction against the blogger, a public apology stating that the boy was not involved in the rape and $25,000 in damages. Goddard was defended in the suit by First Amendment lawyer
Marc Randazza. Most of the specific statements outlined in the Saltsmans' lawsuit did not rise to the level of defamation as alleged. The majority of local anonymous posters named in the lawsuit via their online nametag perceived this lawsuit as merely an avenue to learn their identity. The case was dismissed with
prejudice in December 2012 after Goddard agreed to post a statement that the boy was remorseful about his role in the aftermath of the Steubenville High School rape case. ==Trial and sentencing==