Had her rival gang raped
Pregnant teenager had love rival gang-raped:
19-year-old Destiny Ekanga of England was pregnant when she found out that her baby’s daddy was cheating on her. So did she…
A. Kick him in the sac?
B. Sue him for child support?
C. Have his new squeeze gang raped?
If you guessed C you would be correct.
Destiny Ekanga, 19, plotted the assault after discovering the victim had slept with the father of her unborn baby.
She had gone to her rival’s house on July 20 last year and then, with the help of her friend Halima Ahmed, 21, taken the woman, 23, to Valentines Park in Ilford, east London.
The sobbing victim was subjected to a prolonged ordeal, during which she was raped by four strangers, while Ekanga captured their actions on a mobile phone.
The woman, who cannot be identified, was then taken to the home of Ekanga - who even pretended to comfort her when a police car went past.
En route the pregnant teenager offered her victim to another group of men, claiming she was prepared to perform sex acts “for free.”
The men declined - but the woman was raped again, this time by Somalian Mahad Hussein, 24, before she was allowed to go free.
All involved were sentenced to six and a half years which doesn’t seem nearly long enough for what they did to their victim.
But my question is what breaks in someone’s brain to make them think that something like this is a good idea?
Thanks to Sinthiya for the link.
Tags: Destiny-Ekanga, Eliminating the Competiton, England, gang-rape, Halima-Ahmed, london, Somalian-Mahad-HusseinPOSTED IN: Eliminating the Competiton
1 opinion for Had her rival gang raped
Dan
Dec 9, 2007 at 9:28 am
Some of the most hideous acts I’ve read of have been performed by groups. That pack mentality is scary, seems to turn people back into animals. Works roughly like this:
1.) Person fantasizes.
2.) Person leaks out a bit of the fantasy to another.
3.) Other person receives that fantasy and it’s either supported as reality (it grows), framed as fantasy (it is kept in check), or rejected as unacceptible to speak or think of. (it spawns appropriately aversive guilt)
4.) When another person adds supportive perspective to fantasy, it becomes real, feasible. People seem to be able to justify any behavior they really want to, and that appears especially easy with help.
5.) Emotionally overwrought states can lead to blurred reality/fantasy. People in those states rely even more heavily on the perspectives of others.
Pack mentality. Scariest shit around. Salem witch trials. Atrocities by soldiers. A highly stimulated group is a scary thing.
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