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Professor who abused disabled man gets 12 years in prison

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Rutgers University professor Anna Stubblefield, 46, of West Orange, was led in to Superior Court for her sentencing today, in Newark, N.J. Stubblefield, convicted of sexually assaulting a disabled man who she said had consented to the relationship by communicating on a keyboard, was sentenced to 12 years in prison. (Robert Sciarrino/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)

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Zoe Stubblefield, left, the daughter of Rutgers University professor Anna Stubblefield, right, addressed the court during her mother’s sentencing at Superior Court today, in Newark, N.J. (Robert Sciarrino/NJ Advance Media via AP, Pool)

NEWARK, N.J. » A Rutgers University professor convicted of aggravated sexual assault on a disabled man who she claimed consented to the relationship through assisted typing on a keyboard was sentenced to 12 years in prison today.

Anna Stubblefield will have to serve roughly 10 years of her sentence before being eligible for parole, and will be under lifetime parole supervision and required to register as a sex offender.

Her actions were “a perfect example of a predator preying,” Superior Court Judge Siobhan Teare said before pronouncing the sentence.

Speaking to the judge during a tense, emotional hearing, the victim’s brother denounced the 46-year-old Stubblefield, who was chair of the university’s philosophy department, for exhibiting a condescending attitude toward his family.

“She is not Sandra Bullock and this is not ‘The Blind Side,’” he said, referring to the 2009 movie in which Bullock’s character takes in a homeless boy who goes on to be a football star. Stubblefield is white and the victim is black.

“She raped my brother,” he said, choking back tears. “She tried to supplant his life with some version of life she thought was better.”

Speaking briefly, Stubblefield expressed her “dismay and regrets and sorrow” that her actions caused so much pain.

Stubblefield was married with children when her relationship with the victim developed. Her teenage daughter defended her today in comments to the judge, and accused the victim’s family of characterizing him as incompetent only after Stubblefield told them about the relationship.

Later, the daughter was escorted out by court officers when she yelled a profanity during the victim’s brother’s statement.

In a letter to the court read by Teare, Stubblefield’s husband called her “a pathological liar.”

Stubblefield met the man in 2009 through his brother, who had been taking her course. Over the next two years, Stubblefield worked with him using a method known as facilitated communication. She argued that although he has cerebral palsy and can’t speak, he could communicate by typing.

She claimed the two were in love and they revealed their sexual relationship to his mother and brother in 2011.

Prosecutors challenged the method of facilitated communication, and psychologists determined that he was mentally incompetent and couldn’t consent to sexual activity.

During the trial, the judge barred expert testimony on facilitated communication, determining it’s “not a recognized science.”

Prosecutors had sought a 15-year sentence, five years below the maximum. Defense attorney James Patton had sought probation, arguing that Stubblefield had no criminal past and truly believed the victim had consented to the relationship.

He added that a psychiatrist for the state had found “no indication of a pattern of deviant sexual behavior” in Stubblefield.

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Follow David Porter on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/DavidPorter—AP

4 responses to “Professor who abused disabled man gets 12 years in prison”

  1. mikethenovice says:

    Always conduct yourself in a professional manner. You never know if it will ever come back to bite you.

  2. Racoon says:

    The road to Hell is paved with good intentions. Train your children to be rude, selfish, and never get involved with other people’s misery.

  3. saywhatyouthink says:

    Sounds to me like a guy who very likely would never have experienced sexual relations got that chance from this wacky wafer. Unless she hurt him, I don’t think she deserves jail The family will now sue Rutgers for this, that’s what this is about in the end.

  4. WizardOfMoa says:

    What about that other story about having earning degrees in college and most look down on associate degree and equate it as wasting time and money. Most says a higher degree is better etc…! Well, how do you explain this University Professor and her “respected PhD” education!? It’s not only how much formal education you have its intergrity and respect toward humanity that count the most!

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